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                  <text>Page-16..:...The Daily Sentin81

Wednesday, November 19, 198~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...

I

,---Local Briefs.:.·. . --, Postmaster.issues advisory on holiday . parcels
. Bonds forfeited in mayor's court
Twelve persons forfeited bonds on speeding charges in the
-~~~~f F'C&gt;!"fer2111afy~or R!chll!'d ~Yl_E!!._T_!:Je_sd."Y night while _
anou..,r was in.,.. on ue charge.
Forfeit !ng bonds were Everett Bumgardner, New Haven,
W.Va., $44; James Acrl"!.• P,o meroy, R .D., $45; Cheryl Luning,
Mount Holly Springs, Pa ., $44; Lawrence For.em.an, Mason,
W.Va .. $46; VIolet McManus, Wellston, $45; John Harden,
Albany, $46; Cheryl Thomas, Middleport, $59; Benny Dent, $51;
Greg Lee, Pomeroy, $45; Shirley Baity, Pomer0y, $45; Jamie
Davis, Pomeroy, $46; a nd Arnold Stump. Cheshire, ·$45.
Fined on a speeding c harge was Jack Rollins, Carbondale, $47 ·
an d costs. Roy Neff. Rutland, was fined, $63 and costs, for no
operator's license.

Middleport mayor's court cases
Roy Neff, Rutland, was fi ned on two charges and given a jail
sentence on a third in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
For illegal registration. he was fined $25 and costs, for no
operator's license, '$50 and costs, and for leaving the scene of an
accident , 10 days in jail.
Others fined in the court were Don Lovett, Middleport, $25and
costs, disorderly manner; and Melvin Wise, Middleport. $25 an
costs, open container.
Forfeiting bonds on two charges were Donnie Stone,
Middleport, $50 on squealing tires, and$50nooperator's licens e.

Accident injures 6 people

"Wrap It right I! you want to be foam ed plastics, corrugated
sure that your hol!day parcels cardboard and loose fill material
get delivered in good con~it!on," such as polystyrene, popcor n, or
-~ay_!_llm Sou_is~y~ Poll).eroy -~ shredded newspaper. Loose fill_
postmaster.
material should completely
Using the right size container cover the items bliing mailed,
Is essent lal for safe del!very, Souls by says.
according to Soulsby, who sug·
gested that boXes be adequate in ''· He suggests using tape, . fila·
size for not only the items being ment reinforced, at least twice
mailed but some cushioning around the package, not stringor
material,, and 'strong enough to rope, · and be sure that the ·
hold the weight of their contents. package · is clearly addressed.
If the box is to he wrapped ·in Putting the name and address
paper, it should he equivalent to Inside the package In case the
the kind used In grocery bags (60 address label comes off is also
pound weight). Fiberboard tubes recommended.
and s imilar long packages are
Postal regulations limit size to
acceptable If the length does not
70
pounds, total length to 108
exceed 10 times the girth.
in ches, and they must be at least
Cus hioning absorbs ·and dis· 3\!, inches wide and live Inches
tributes shock and vibration, and long. Over!nsur!ng ~· not recom·
mendedslneein theeventofloss,
goo:j materials for this are

Area deaths
Marie and Ray Saxon, Addison;
a daughter, Jacqueline Case,
Robert Cornelius, 74, Locust Gallipolis; six grandda'ughters,
Street, Cheshire, died Thesday at two grandsons. a brother, a sister
and several nieces and nephew s.
the Holzer Medical Center.
Besides his parents, he was
Mr. Cornelius was born Sept. .
preceded
In death by a daughter,
17, 1912, In Fostoria, a son of the
late Claude and Bessie Maloney Dianne Cornelius, and a grand·
Cornelius. He was a ret Ired son, Timothy Cornelius.
Mr. Cornelius, a vetera.n of
teamster from t~e Mansfield
Local Union and a retired village
World
II, was a Locall-216,
member of
the 40 etWar
8, Teamsters
worker In Cheshire.
• Surviving are his wife. Erna Feeney-Bennett Postl28, Ameri·
Cornelius. whom he married on can Legion, Middleport: VeteAug. 19, l 939; a son. Robert Jr .. rans of Foreign Wars Post 4464,
Gailipoi~; the Loyal Order of
Amanda;
two sons and
0
1
daughters-in-Jaw, Ronald and
· Joan Cornelius and Claude and
Tammy Cornelius, all of Che· Post 23.
Services will be held'at 1 p.m.
shir e; a daught er and son-lq-law,
Friday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home in Middleport, with Rev. Ron Lemley
off!cat!ng. Burial wUI he In
!Continued from Page 1)
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheproblem in the county. Torres
shire. Military rites will he
said that among 305 students
conducted at t he graveside.
examined in the county, 156 had
head lice, 38 of them in the Meigs Friends may call at the funeral
Local Distr ict. The board ap- home on Thursday from 6-9 p.m.

Robert CorneliQs

A twocar accident on Ohio 248 at Success Road injured six
people Tuesday.
The accident is still under investigation, according to the
Galll a-Meigs post of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Troopers said an eastbound car driven by Michael Manley, 22,
Middleport, reportedly collided head-on in a curve Wit h a
westbound vehicle driven by Sayre Stewart, 55, New Haven.
The acci dent inju red both drivers and four passengers Mar k Rathbu rn, 24, Rt . I. Reedsville; Angel Harmon, 19, Rt.1 ,
Ches hire: Walter Schart!ger, 25, Middleport: and Cindy
Priddy, 21, Rt. I. Middleport. Ali were taken to VMH and treated
an d released, with the exception ofSchart!ger, who was treated
at the scene.
The patrol had not determined In · whose vehicle the
passengers were riding.
The patrol cited Manley for left of cent er.

EMS units answer 3 calls

only the actu al va iu eoft helost or
damaged items is paid, not a
·

.

~~ru~Q.

Pomeroy at 6: J;i a. m. to the Meigs County Infirmary for
Lincoln Russell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
1:20 p.m. to the senior citizens bullding for Hcfen Crabtree to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 5:36 p.m.
transported Bon Stewart. Michael Manley and Mark Rathburn
from an auto acci dent a t the intersection of Ohio 248 and Success
Road; Cindy Priddy a nd Angel Harman were taken from the
scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the EMS 1116 transfer
unit ; Walter Scharliger was treated at the scene.

"You . don't have : to ··smoke
tobacco to reap the attention and
benefits of the American tancer
Society's Great American smo.
keout tomorrow," Meigs chair·
person Barbara Mathew s ·
reports.

Third par.ty plaintiff named
Stevie B. Coleman has been named a third party plaintiff In
the Meigs County Common Piase Court case of Robert Sisson,
and his mot her, Iva Sisson, against Tom Werry, Jim M!ller,
Fenton Taylor, all of Pomeroy, and the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
The case stems from an incident a t Meigs High School on or
about Nov. 9, 1984. Na med as third party defendants were
Robert Jeffers. Roger Jeffers ·and Janet J effers. Due to a
conflict,. Judge Charles Knight has withdrawn from the case.
Judge James Stilwell of Hocking County has been appointed to
hear the case, which Is set for trial March 2.
Central Trust Co. has been granted a $'5,000 judgment from
Os by A. Martin.
Brian Clark Ritchhart has been given a six·mon_t h suspended
sentence In the Chillicothe Correct !onallnstitute for cultivation
of marijuana. Rltchhart has been placed on probation for two
years.
A~d a restra ining order has been issued against Steven C.
Boso, defendant, In a case by Pamela L, Boso.

i·
Not only do .users risk ora(
cancer, but they are also in··
danger of gum r ecession and
other serious dental disorders.
Ma thewsreport s.

That's why all tobacco userswith or l&lt;(ithout smoke '- are
being asked 'to join tomorrow's
Great American Smokeout, Mil·
thews concludes.

Recently the dangers of smokeless tobacco use have become so
well publicized that Kansas City
Royals slugger, George Brett, a
longtime . chewer; announced '
that he had given up the habit.
And, as a r esult of a new law,
television ads for smokeless
tobacco have been banned. The
same law requires warning lab·
els he printed on ali packaging
starting this year.

••••••••••••

EKct• oil rniV make hair droopv.
Wllh frequently, using conditioner
tvtry 01h1r tlma; morw

A study discloses that 54
percent of some 12 percent of
college st udents dipping or chewlng believe that smokeless pro
ducts are less harmful th an
cigarettes.

Denied the benefits you 'deserve7 Call a · lawyer with
ex pe~lence in handling Social
Security cases. No attorney
fee unless your claim ·is
approved. Free · Initial
consultation.

507 Main

.

CAll JACK COlLINS or DAVE PEARSON

These Special Apply to GM Owners Only

r----------- •COUPON--~----------.)
II ' WINTER COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL
II
GET TOUR GM VEHKIE READY FOI THE lONG WIITER. HAVE

I Test coolant. oressure check entire system for leaks, drain and fill 1
I cooling system if needed with 111nuine 'GM coolant, check hoses, 1
1
I clamps and drive belts. !All Added Labor &amp; Pono Extra!

~cial Price $12 95 • TAX

TAX

.

.OIL AND FILTER

1·

I
.
,drain oil ani replace filter us in&amp; Mr. Goodwrench I
oil and AC filter. In this special WI insist on usini quality Mr. Good· I
wrench oil and AC filteiS. This is an honest to goodnessspecial on qual- I
ity GM parts. No substitue for quaity. limit 5 quarts oil.
·I

REGUlAR~ • TAX

S~cial Price $1 S95 + TU

;.-GOOD THRU DEC . 1, 1986

-~.:-:;... .. . _. ,

I1
I

L------------i:OUPON· -~----- -----1
.
'I

for 1 conditioning tr. .mtnt.

l,.d. u, lu1n1 ~!' i ta Rovmond
IStw&gt;ila P11w "• l · !QIIIIfnq )

tWi:h Coopool

GOOD THR!J DEC. 1, 1986

••••••••••••
For gtorlou• hllr, mtkt 1 dltt now

Trulfy M11nholl, Mary Powtll. l011111 ,

Point PI

,lritVROLET -OLDSMOBILE-CADIUAC

in dry-, ttltic·lld*n Mtlhtr.

t1 t W. 2nd St.
Po-oy, 011.
" 992-6720
HOUI!: Mon.-lat. 9:00 to' 9:00
Call tor An Appointll'llnl

l

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(Witt: Co..-1 I

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MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 T0 '6
FRIDAY B TO 5; SATURDAY 9 i'O 3
308 E. MAIN
992·6614
POMEROY, 01'
" SERVICE THAT COUNTS"

&gt;TII·•f

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HURRY! I
Place your I

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r

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our

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ristmas

Wednesday,

~ovember

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26th

COPY DEADUNE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21st

Call THE DAILY SENTINEL 992-2156
'

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!

I GIFT GUIDE EDITION

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message in

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and ask for display advertising
L-•••••••••--••••••••••--·--••--•••••

•

a1 y

••

enttne

Reagan
defends
Iranian
•
actions

..

local students
David E. Gloeckner, Racin e, ' 1976-78.
was re-elected to a three-year
Eastern FFA received a
term on the Meigs Soil and Water trophy (or first place in t he
Conservation District Board of Agriculture Soil Judging Con·
Supervisors at the Meigs SWCD test. Team members were Tim
annual meeting held recently at Lawson, Chris Lance and Frank
Eas tern High School.
Parker. High Individuals In the
Edson Roush, Racine, was agriculture contest receiving
presented the Goodyear F armer cas h awards were Tim Law son,
of the Year plaque by John Fultz, fi rst place, and Tom Parker,
Meigs Tire Center, representing Meigs FFA. second pia&lt;:t.
Southern FFA rece:ved a
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co.
trophy for first place In the
Roush and his wife, Mary , Urban Cont est. Team members
became cooperators of the dis· were Scott Bickers, Shannon
tr!cl in 1~66. They own and Williams and Benny Dail ey, who
operate 145 acres in Sutton also placed first, second and
Township. They raise hay, sil- third, respectively, in the
age, corn, wheat, · oats and contest.
Meigs SWCD caps were presbarley. Over the. past several
years they have insta lled sprin g ented as appreciation awards to
developments. completed no-till those persons who used the
pasture and hay seedln gs, pas- dis trict's notill equipment t~ls
tur e and hay land Improvements year. Those present and receiva nd subsurface dra inage. They Ing caps were Roy Holt er, Larry
have don e an excellent job in Montgomery, Tom Th eiss and
conserv ing our so il and improv- Chuck Yost.
ing the land over the yea rs.
Affiliate Members hip Cert ifi·
Roger a nd Marviene Beegle of cates were presented to Bank
Racine received the Outstanding One of Athens, Bill's Tire SerFarm Family Award. Th e Bee· vice, Buckeye Gas Products.
gles own andoperate292 acr es in Cent ral Trust Co., D.R . Rous h's
Lebanon Township. They rent an Body Shop, Dairy Valley, Faceadditional 92 acres of c ropland. myer Lumber Co., Farmers
They became cooperators of the
0
Meigs SWCD In 1982.
They raise beef cattle, corn, Greenhouse. Racine Home Nasoybeans and hay. In 1983 they t io nal Bank, J.D. Drilling Co.,
constru cted an upground an ima l Jay mat Coal Co., Lead ing Creek
waste storage area for their beef Watershed Associa tion, MG~
feedlot They have also com· Farm Cit y, Mont gomery Trailer
pleted spring development s and Sales, Ohio Pallet Co.. Pullins
pasture and hay land reseedings Excavating. Quality Print Shop,
and improvements. They feed Rutland Depa rt ment Sto r e,
out approximately 40 steers each Southern Ohio Coal Co.. 3R
year.
Industries a nd Vinton Cou nty
Rick Pitorak. District Conser- National Bank. ·
John t? ostanzo of Portland
vationist. Athens. showed
conservation-oriented s lides of received lhe Wildlife Conserva·
his work with the Peace Corps In • t ion.Awa rd from Larry Johnson,
Lesolho, south'e r n Africa, In Wildlife Biologis t, Ohio Depart·

SATURDAY; NOV. 22

1:00 P.M.

ff(EE ~g~~oKS
. .:. . .~.\'·'l:l33~
lllltUQUM111'UIAIT

41300 LAUAEL CLIFF ROAD .- POMEROY, OHIO ~5769

''

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Wrller
The Meigs Count y Commls·
s ioners voted Wednesday to
participate In a Buckeye HillsHocking Valley R.eg!ona l Devel·
opment District low- Interest loan
program.
The program is being organ·
!zed to provide las t resort finan·
cia! assista nce to local businesses within Buckeye Hills'
eight-county area.
Steve Powell told the commiss ioners that the program Is
supposed to help ex pandin g ·or
start · up businesses "fill the gap"
betw een private lender finan cin g
and sta te participation.
Each count y, or municipalities
within t he counties. may contrlb·
ute money to the fund, which will
.then be m atched ." three to one"

by state mone.v through Buckeye
Hills.
The am ount contributed by
each separate entity, and the
match, would t hen be earmarked
for use only In that lo cation. The
only st ipulation to the program is
tha t prlva le financial backing
must besought first , Powell said.
The Buckeye Hills program can
not be first choice, he added ..
The co mmissioners beli eve the
loan program may be wor th·
while, a nd voted to contribu te
$12,500 on behalf of Meigs
Cou nty, "prov iding t he funds are
available." The $12,500 would
then be m atched by Buckeye
Hills and become $50,000 for
business loa ns In Meigs Count y.
A request was made fr om
Sheriff Howard Frank for an
addit ional $150 to pay October's

•J

....

tieves "in the co rr ectness of the
decision" to engage in a· secr et

WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AWARD Keith WoQd, Meigs County game protector, and

deal with Iran, co nt endin g it
cou ld have brought freedo m for
American hostages In Lebanon ,
had it not been exposed.
In a s pirited defense of his
policy .at a nat ion ally broadcas t
news co nference Wednesday
night , Re agan conceded his deci·
s lon 18 months ago to explore
bett er ties with Ira n was " highly

Larry .Johnson, ODNR DiviSion of Wildlife, rlghl,
present the Wildlife Conservation Award lo John
Costanzo, center.

.

co nt rover sial" and -divided hi s
'
top adviser s.
.

"(B un. I don ' t think a mistake
was made." he said. deny ing t he
uproar over his covert operation
has placed him on the defensive.
- " ll wasa hlgh-ris kgamble ... but ;
I don't look on this as a fiasco or a ·.,..

great failure of any kind.
" I deeply believe in the correct ness of the decis ion, " · he
added. "The risk was great but so
wa s the potential reward." ·
Reagan also again denied that
shipment of TOW anti-tank mis·
siles and spa re parts for anti·
ai r craft batteries represented
ransom for hostages held by
pro- I r.anian terrori sts in
Le banon.
" Iran held no hostages." he
said. " I don't see tha t the
hos tage-takers. the kidn appers,
go! anything. "

a

URBAN SOIL JUDGING- Shannon Williams.
Benny Dailey and Scoll Bickers, Jell to right,
r eceived ilrst placo:, for lhe Urban Soil Judging
ment of Nat ural Resources Dlv·
ls!on of Wildlife. Costanzo received the award for hi s
partici pation in t he fo od plot
program, tree an d shru b pro

Team and aL•o cash awards for first through
third, respectively, In the urban contest.

gram. hunt ers safety program.
project wildlife for teachers
program, and rais ing and releasing quail In Meigs County.
Cos tanzo has a positive attitude

about wild li fe a nd conserva tion.
Th ey were approxI mately, 148
far mers, a ffili ate members and
interes ted persons present at the

meet in g and banquet.

In oiher business, lhe commis- from Rob(&gt;r t Michael Rober ts to
grocery bill at the county jaiL
Frank sa id he is s hor t of funds sioners hav,e decided to advert lse Donna Fay Barley, doing busl·
nes s as The Cove. The app lt ca·
to pay the bill because II Is for ground noor office space ror
difficult to est imate the number the Meigs County Board of tion will he submitted bv the
of prisoners to be jailed over a Electio ns. to better serve lhe commissioners to t he Ohio Deyear's time, and the length of needs of el derly and handicapped
partment of Liquor Contro l.
And, Count y Engineer Philip
their sentences. Frank sa id new ell lzens. The board of elect Ions Is ·
laws rega rdi ngstlffersent encing . presently housed In the Pomeroy
Roberts reported t hat the state
for drunken drivers has In· Maso nic Buildin g. behind the hi ghw ay mil eage man has made
creased the local jail population. Meigs Cou nt y Courthouse.
his annu a l visit to the cou nt v and
Th e Ohio Department of Ll·
Through October, Fra nk said,
reports 252.12 miles of Meigs
'' over 500 more meals" than I3st qu or Control has rejected an Cou nt y roads , the same as las t
year h av~ already been served. applicat ion for a C-1 and C-2 year . .
The mileage man approved
He also est !mated he will need li cense from Kenneth Lyndon
over $2,200 more to pay grocery Black, doing business as D &amp; B
requests to add Dixon and Edna
bills for Nove mb er and Quick S!op, Ohio 143, Salisbury Carmen roads to Salis bury Town·
Decem ber.
Township, du e to location of Ihe s hip mileage, as well as a road off
A resolution wa s passed by the es tablishment a nd testimony re-. Count y Road 3 nea r the int ersec·
board to enter Into a con tract ceived at a public heari ng In
tlon of Ohi o 7.
Roberts also reported that
with the Meigs Office ·or Litter Pomeroy.
Control.for a dministration of the
No public com ment s were sealing has bee n comp leted to the
count y's $79.650 litter g rant for received regar din g an applica- entrance an d drive of Racine' s
next year.
tion for a liqu or license transfer Shr in e Club Park.

Senate 0/(s Appalachia bill Tax relief measures win approval
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The state of Ohio Is goi ng to bal for the
Appalac hi an region wit h a new office in the Ohio Department of
Developm_ent.
The state Senate Wednesday una nimous,ly adopted lcgls iatlor:
creal lng the Governor 's Office of Appalachian Ohio to represent
the interests of 28 counties In eas tern and southern Ohio.
The bill was ret urned to the House for cert ain concurrence In
Seriat e changes. Ho4se Speaker Vernal G. Riffe J r., D-New ~
Boston, is from the Appal ac hian region.
• ·
..,
Under the bill, the director of the new office, reporting
directly to the governor. will represent the.s tate on the federal
Appalachi an Regional Commission and ·will represent the
Interes ts of t~e Appalachian region in t he General Assembly
and before sta te boards, agencies ·a nd commissions.
T he office will focus attention on proble ms peculiar to the
regi on, and highlight recommended solutions. ,
"It is very importa nt to keep alive the memory•ofA ppalach la
.Ohio. ·· said Sen. Robert Ney, R-Bilrnesvine.
•
The office is assigned to form a consensus on public issues and
policies among organizations serving the Appalachian region,
and to help res(\ive differences between state and federa l
agencies and government and private officials, In t!)e region.
Sen. H . Cooper Snyder, R·Hilisboro, tr ied to amend the bill to
give three existing local development districts equal responsl·
blllty with the new office. But the amendment failed on a 16-16
vote alter Sen. Robert L. Burch, D-Dover, said it might bog
down federal grants and endanger House approval of the bill.

~

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP I) - Pres·
ident Reagan steadfastly ·bli-

.County to join loan program if funds are available

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~~~~iyGS~o1.A~~ r~:r}~r~b=~~

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cooperato~s,

DUNLAP
AlTORNEY AT LAW , ,
675•3999

JIM c0 BB.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Sadie Thuener.
Syracuse; James Ru ssell, Mid·
dleport; Early Scarberry, Ra ·
cine; Lavada Woodyard, Middl eport; , Wlloor Smith, Rutland;
He len Crabtree, Pomeroy;
Gladys Walburn, Middleport;
Cathy Morris, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Anna Koenig,
Edward Thacker, J erry Colmer.

Super Lotto
15-24-19-6-28-36

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II &amp;GUlAR PRICE)H@i •
I

Clo~dy 1!!!J!ght,
wllh a
chance of rain or drizzle ancJ' a
low in the mid :ios. Becoming.
mostly sunny Friday, ' wlh
highs in the mid 40s. The
probability of. precipitation 18
40 percent tonight and near
zero Friday.

· Daily Number
234

swco·honors

DISABILITY

Elizabeth Bower

fr~quently

"(rdl .'f•rd1v• 11nlnn-

.prevrew
at Athens

Social Security

lloco:::mo::dod at U month or 24,000 milo inttrYDhl

To dlrken lllhtl, bNih . with
miiCIFI wll'ld in lho" upWird
ttrak•.

Ohio Lottery

•

The lOth anniversary of the
national event could also be a
special day !or dippers a~d
chewers, Mathews points out.
t--------.,-----!,-

~~~e~nLtf~~~~~a~ ~!t:C ::~

proved a nIt free policy.
Harry Clark was hired as a
substitut e school bus driver for
the current school year.
Following an executive session
on P.ersonnel. finances , collect !ve
bargaining and pendin g litlga·
tlon, the board announced that It
had approved an approximat e4. 7
percent pay increase for princl·
pals or the district t'o conform
with the recent sa lary increases
given teachers. Las t night's
action did not Include increases
for the administra tive central
oUice.

•
___ .__ID

S·mokeo
· . u't -observance slat@d ,..,·,:.--~-

Board accepts

Meigs Cou nty E mergency Medical Services reports three

hi gher Insured amount, SoulsbY:
concludes.
,
·
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COLUMBUS !UPII - More
tax reli ef is on the way; and the
ball is In the chamber oft he Ohio
House of Representativ es today
as

lawmakers

move

toward

a nt.!clpated adjournm ent for the
year Friday.
Despite dl~e w~rnlngs about
the fiscal consequences , t he Ohio
Senate Wedn esday approved a
pair of House-passed bills offer·
!ng $23 million worth of tax relief
for elderly or dlsabl~d lowincome homeowners a nd !ami·
lies wlih day care expenses.
Those bills may receive House
concurrence in amendments to
day a nd go on their way to the
office o!Oov. Richard F. Celeste.
Meanwhile, t he House Ways
a nd Means Cop:m!ttee wa s to
hold a hearing today on Senatepassed legls.lation n egat !n ~ the
effects or. the elimination of
certain federal tax credits and
exemptions by granting lndlvld·
ual and corporate tax relief at t he
state leveL That bill should he
ready for House floor action

Friday.
At the same time, a heavily·
lobbied civil justice and insurance reform bill is being prepared for a final vote In both the
Senate a nd House Frlday ,'hav lng
received the blessing of a joint
six· member co nference com mit·
tee Wednesday.
The day care tax credit an.d t he
expansion of the "homestead
exemption" for elderly or dis·
a bled !ow· income property
owners received 28·3 approval In
the Senate, thou gh there was
grumblin g from vario us corners.
" This bill recognizes that day
care is a necessary expense of
employment, " said Sen. Grace
L. Drake, R·Solon. " It aids
families who are looking for
work.''
The bill au thor izes about
150,000 qualifYing families to
take 25 percent of their federal
day car,e credit on their state
income tax return as of Jan. I,
1988. The .credit will apply to

,,

fam il ies using day care services
for children under lfi or disabled
depen.dent adults.
Drake sa id t he average state
credit will amount to about $75,
more for low wage earners. II
wil l cost the ·stat e about $14
.. million a year.
The cost worried opponenl s,
such as !;fn. Theodore M. Gray,
R -Co lumbus, who cautioned that
the Legislat ure has Increased
expendilures by $90 million since
the budget passed last year.
"We have already been
warned that the budget Is goi ng
to be cut,',' sa id Gray. "There are
going' to be a lot of people
disappointed that they don' t ger
the incr eases they ask for lin
nex t year's budget)."
Under the other bill, the
homestead exempt ion, a reduc·
lion In the taxable valu e of real
es tate, wUI he increased slightly
a nd expanded to elderly and
disabled homeowners earni ng
less than $16,500 a year.
,

However. for the first time.
Reagan direc tly linked the sale of
arms to the release of hostages,
say ing that after one U.S. ship·
ment , '' I sa id to them there was

something Ihey could do to show
their s incer it y. and if they r ea'll ~
mean t it that they were nor In
favor ·of backing terrorists. t hey
could begin by releasi ng •our
hostages."
Three U.S. hostages have been
released by the Isla mic Jihad, A
pro- l rania~ faction in Lebanon,
si nce Reagan undertoo k his
secret initiative.

Terry Anderson. head of the
As sociated Press In Beirut. a nd
Thomas Sut her landofthcA m erl'·
ca n University of Beirut , were
long-time hostages Reagan hoped
would be freed along wit h f h~
univers it y's David Jacobsen, re-

leased Nov. 2.
" if t here had not been so much
publicity." the president ~a\d,
"t here would have been two
more
hostages released pr es umabl y

An derson

and

Sutherland.
Three ot.hers - Joseph Cicip·
pio, Frank Reed and Edward
Tra cy - are believed being held
bv fact ions not directlv asso
ciated with the Is lami c ' Jihad .
Another American, William
Buck ley, was reported s la in ·bi&gt;
hi s ca pt or s last y ear.

...

· "As a matter of fac t," Reagan ·
sa id. " I ha\'r reason to believe •
that we wou ld have had a ll fi ve o r
them by
. las: week" had the '
secrecy of thr opera ! ion not bf:'rn
breached.
.
The t hr(l(l hos tages who WC'rr ..

.

released wr r r the Rev. Bcnj ~lmin
Weir. who wn ~ freed last \'(' ar · ..
'

'.

the Rev. Lawre:ice Jenco. 51' .
leased In Ju lv: an.d Dal'id ..Ia - .
cobscn, who ~a! ned his fr('(•dnm ;
Nov. 2. LeS&lt; than 4R hours aftrr .
Jacobsen's I'(' lease, a pro.S,vrb n
. magazine pu blished in Lebanon ~
disclosed the secret deal
·
The presi den t , questioned ·
about damagr to his crrd lbil itv •
since he undertook the clandrs.'.:
tine operat ion. sa id h&lt;• , was :
confident th e American prople •
" understbnd that so metimes vou :
have to keep a secret In ordr.r to ':'
¥

save lives. ' ·

•

t

But in trying to expla in, hi$ ~'
pos it ion. Reagan sowrd new ~
confu sionbyasscrting theUn!ted ,
States '' had nothing to do wit h" :
any sh ipm ent s of weapons to Iran •
by a thi r d country- a positlon·he '
reversed in a written statement •
momenl.s after the new s conrrr- ,

ence e nded.

~

I

'"

�.

Thursday, November 20, 1916

Victory Cirele.

Commentary

Page-2- The Daily ~ntinel
•Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Th...-sday,
November 20, 1986
'
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The ·Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTEQ TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~lb

Bm~· ~L....-If"'T""E9d,F=i

~v

.·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD .
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press Interna tiona l. Inland Dally Press
AssQClation and the American Newspaper P.ubllshers Association.

~ less

u:TrERS OF oP!NION are wetconic .. They stlould
than Dl words
long. All letters aresubje&lt;-t to edltlng and roo st be s igned with name, address and
telephoo e number. No LDl signed lett ers will 00 publ!shed. Letters should be In
guod taste. addr£"Ssing Issues , not personalities.

Letters to the Editor
A fascinating attraction
•

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5

7

• •

••

•

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-

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•

: Farewell, yellow(Jawg_-__---_·_·_.J_iim_es_J_.K_u_pa_tit~·ck.
\

I

WASHINGTON - When I flrst cons istent. The doctrine Of pure
Now look: In . the 100th Con· elected Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, a
became. addicted to poUt lcs , party loyalty fell Into dls javor in gress ihat convenes in January; tolerably conservative Republi·
40.odd yea rs ago, the landscape the time. of. Teddy Roosevelt.
no fewer than 20 of the sovereign can, in .anot her landslide. While
still was ,)arge!y populated by two Franklin Roosevelt's bid for a · states will send one De mocrat they were at II. New Yorkers
redoubt a bl e breeds .. These were third term saw massive defec· · anct one Re publi can · to the elected a Republican camp.
, the rock· ribbed Republicans and !Ions !rom Democratic ranks. In
Senate. The custom these days Is troller and a Democratic attar·
the yellow·dawgDemocrats. The the 77th Congress of 1941-43. the notto run as a party nominee; the ney general.
laJt er. mostly.Sou thPrners, were first Congress I had anything to custom Is slmpty· to run . Candi·
How do you ex plain these
so loya l they would vote for a do wit h. at least a dozen sta tes
things• Idaho re- elected the most
d~tes conduct their campaigns
j yellow dog ift hecanineappea red sent divided delegations to the with lillie regard to the old conservative member of the
on a Democratic tickN.
Senate.
symbols of elephant a nd dank ~ . Senat e. Re publi ca n Steve
Looking at the returns of this
Even so, the parties had a
PolII ical act ion committees have Symms . . T hen Ida ho elected
month's elect ions, one has to certain puissa nce In t hose days.
dis placed party fund·ra lsers. As Democrat Cecil Andru s as gover·
wonder what has. become of the Th ey rai sed money; t hey
one consequence some peculiar ·nor. Oregon re-elected Re publi·
di e- hard partisans of yote. lnon e . groomed promising young peo·
things ha ppen .at the poll s .
can Sen . Bob Packwood and
sta'te after another: they have pie for sta te and local offlee;·
On Nov. 4, by wa)' of example, c hose Democrat Nell G o!d~rh ·
been dis placed by one-ticket through the devices of patronage
the voters of New York state midi to t he stat ehouse. It was the
l j voters who appear to disdain they rewarded . the faithful and
re·elected Gov. Marla Cuomo, a same story in P enn sy lva nia :
both Ideo logy and party label.
punished the mavericks. The
tolerably liberal Democra t, In a Republican senat or. Democratic .
To be sure, the American political m ac hinery ra n on parti·
landslide. Simultaneously . this governor: In Ca lifornia and
e lectorat e never has been wholly san oil.
same s tat ewide elector ate re- Sout h Ca rolina t he pattern was
reversed: Democratic senators,
Repu bllcan ·governors.
Cons ider Wisconsin. ft Is represented in the Sen ate by
William P roxmi re. Democrat,
and .Robert Kasten, Republican.
During the 99th Congress. thes e
genllemen cast opposing votes on
such issues as civil right s.
· ta xat ion. defense spending,
cruise miss iles. war powPrs ,
chemica l weapons. the death
penally a nd covert opera tions in
Nicaragua.
It makes no sense. Ca liforn ia
returned Democrat Alan Cra n·
ston to the Senat e; he r ates 100
with Amf'rica ns for Democratic
Action. Ca liforni a's ot her senator is Re publican Pete Wilson. He
rate; 10. Cra nston su pport s Pres·
ident Reagan on one vote out of
five: Wilson supports the prcsi·
dent on eight votes out of 10.
It beat s me . Wyoming. with
tw o slo.utly conservative Repub·
Jica ns in the Senate. will have a
Democra tic gov ernor.

Free ride __________J_ac_k_A_nd__,e_rs_o_n_&amp;_ J_o_se_p_h_S.;__p_ea_r

He's had it with 33
. I HAVE HAD IT! La st Friday
eVen ing it took me 25 minutes to
drive through Lancaster a nd it
would have taken longer had I not
given up on Memorial. Drive and
deioured through downtown Lan .
caster. The traffic furt her south
on the two lane sec tion of Rt : :l3
ap&lt;tln the City of Nelsonville was
just as bad. This wa s a weekend
~en nothi ng special was hap·
(ienlng at Ohio University In
At)lens.
• There mu st be thou sands of
Southeastern Ohio res ide nt s just
~s fru strated as !. How l'{luch
Ianger are we going to put up with
thi s-? Irs time for everry motor·
ist ln Hocking, Athens and Meigs
Counties to start ra ising Hell!
: !travel ex te nsively throughout
Qhlo by automobile in my work
and I am unaware of another
~lghwq y with Rt. 33's tra ff ic

problems . Rt. 23 from Col umbu s
to Portsmouth carries no more
traffic than Rt . 33 yet it is four
lane all the way a nd the Chilli ·
&lt;iothe by· pass ·was completed
yea rs ago. We ha ve an exte ll ent
highway by· pass sytem here In
Athens whic h we are very
tbankful for . However. it Is
somewhat like bel ng offered
app le pi e for deser t a ft er su ffer·
l)lg through a n entree of breat
a nd water.
: My purpose Is no! to compla in
~bou t. others' good fortu ne or to
place bl a me on past actions or
lack thereo f. I am pleading for
action.- II Is time for a ll of us.
Including Ohio Unlverslly, to
place a ll the pressure we can on
Governor Celeste a nd our sta le
legislators. We can no longer be
put olf with fi ve year plann ing

cyc les. environmenla l impact
sta te ment s that take forever,
lack of construction fund s,
squ a bbles over locat ion and all
other t'easons (excuses! for not
gettin g started .
If it takes another penny a
ga llon tax to finan ce highway
cons tructio n so be it. We wtll save
dollars in the long run and will
never notic e the dlfferehce.
II seems that everybody run·
nlng for public office these days
talks a bout economic develop.
ment. Having spent the la st 24
years In that work I'm not certain
they know what the term means.
One t hing Is for certain , you
ca nn ot have an economic dev el·

opme nt program without a com·
prehensive economic develop·
me nt strategy.
The cornerstone of every eco·
nomic development strategy is
transportation. If you can't get
the re all the other good things
yo u ha ve to of fe r are
meaningless .
For all lis reputed influence in
the Ohio General Assembly I
wonder why Ohio Univers ity has
not been more vis ible In the fig ht
for Im provements to Rt. 33? I
a lso wonder how many prosper·
live stude nt s and faculty have
been turned off by the La ncaster
mess . and the Ne lsonville
bottle neck ?
(don't know how you organize
a three county special interest
group out somebody ou t there
must. I won't be traveling on Rt.
33 forever but ot hers' will. lt can
only ge l worse, the time to make
ourselves heard Is now .
Philip F . Lavelle

Today in history
,.: Today Is Thursday, Nov. 20, the 314th day of 1986 wll h 41 to follow.
' The moon Is moving towa rd Its la st quarter.
; The morning stars are Mercury an d Venus.
'
.; The evenlng ,stars are Mars, Jupiter and Satur n.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They include
botanist John Merle Coulter In l851: Nor!l)an Tho mas, six times the
Socialist Party ca ndidat e for U.S. pres ide nt . In l884 ; "Dick Tracy "
eartoonlst Chester Gould In 1900; television commentator Alistair
Cooke In 1908 (age 78) ; slnger·actress Judy Canova In 1916; actress
Gene Tierney In 1920 (age 66! ; Sen. Robert F . Kennedy In 1925;
comedians Kaye Ballafd In 1926 (age 00) an d Dick Smothers In 1939
(age 47 ), and act ress Bo Derek In 1956 (age ;)} ).
I

WASHINGTON
Is Chief
Justice William Re hnqulst a
scofflaw?
That's exactly what congres·
s ional sources say he is. And at
first or second glance. it cer·
talnly looks bad for Rehnqu lst.
He has been deliberately Jgnor·
in g a new law - passed by
Congress a nd s igned by P res t·
dent Reagan last month - that
prohibit s a ll but a handfu I of high
officials from hav in g chauffeur·
· driven government limous ines
take them to an d from work. The
ch ief justice Is conspicuously
absent from the list of eligible
VIPs.
A Supreme Court spokesper·
son confirmed that Rehnquislls
bein g dr iven 'to and from work In
a government limo. She told our
associat e Donald Goldberg t ha t
the chief justice Is aware of the
new Jaw's provisions a nd has a
Supreme Court alt orney a nalyz.
ing the statu te.
·The court spokesperson said
Rehnqu lst may be entitled to a
free r ide on grou nds of secur ity.
The new law does allow that
pa rticular exemption - for an
official who has received a death
threat, for exam ple.
But the law requires cert ifying

In writing to Congress that
" hig hly unusual circumstances
present a clear and present
danger," wl! h ' reasons spell ed
out. Congressional sources say
Rehnqulsl has not submitted
sucli a writt e n cert ification and
thu s Is not e nt II led to a limo for

security reasons.
This legislation, Introduced by
Sen. William Proxmlre, D:Wis.,
was Int ended to cut. bar!{ on the
expe nsive. unnecessary use of
governm ent ve hicles by public
officials. Congress ional studies
showed that Ill crally hundreds or
fede r al offlclals were commu t·
ing courtesy of the taxpayersnearly 70 In t he DefenseandSta tc
Department s, for exam ple. The
cos t ran to millions of dollars a
year.
The law s las hed the Jist of
eligibl es drastically. Except for
V!Ps with security probl ems and
few executive br.anch offi cials
explicity granted the pr ivilege by
the president. use o! chauffeu r·
driven limousines to get to a nd
from work was limited to the
president, the vice pres ide nt a nd
the heads of most agencies NOT including the Supreme
Court.

Capitol Hill sources have des·
crlbed the fi er ce lobbyi ng bv
vatious agencies in thi s s tatus·
conscious city to have their
offici als exempted. The Whit e
House - which has a comfort a·
bl e s hare of the exempt ions e ncouraged this pressure by
telling agency heads to tak e their
beefs to Congress.
One official who had a good
case w,a s Se!wa Roosev.e lt. the
State Department' s chief of
protocol. Her job requires full·
dress ca ll s on v isiting .dignatar·
les at all hours of the day and
night. Despite pers iste nt phone
calls to Capit ol Hill , she didn't
m ake Ihe list. But she to ld us the
Whit e House has assured her she
will be a mong the 10 offi cial s the
president can des igna te to rece ive home · t o·o ffi ce
tra nsporta tion.
Other V!Ps won 't be so fo rtu·
nate and wUJ either have to drive
themselves to work. take buses
or ri de the Metro. Neit her t he
oorr\ptroller of the currency or
the cha irman of the Feder al
Deposit Insurance Corp.. for
exam pl e, made it onto the sHort
list of free riders, even 1hough
their agencies lobbi ed long and
hard. May be they ca n hit ch a ride

w ith the chairma n of the Federal
Reserve Board. who did m"ake
the commut er lis t.
Eve n heavy clout in Congress
proved unavailing this time. Sen.
Ted Stevens. R ·Alaska. who
chairs the Influ ential Sena te P ost
Office sut,Jco mm It fee, tried to get
chauffeured commuter rides for
t he postm aster gene ral a nd hi s
two aides. He had to settlefor just
the pos tmaster general.
FURY IN FOGGY BOTTOM:
Secreta ry of State Geor ge Shullz
was reported to be outraged over
·Ihe ' Whit e House' s backdoor
arms ·for· host ages deal with
Iran. but his wrath was nothing
compared to that of his profes·
slonal underlings In Foggy Bot·
tom . Rank· and· fil e career diplom a ts we r ~ under s tandably
aghas t at dlsrlosureofthesecr el
arms suppli es sent to Iran; for
years they have been quietly
ent rea ting U.S. a llies and ot her
gov er nm ent s not to sell weapons
to the Ira nians. In fact , one of
those deli cate don't·sell missions
was in progress at the very time
news of the administration 's
secret deal hll the he adlines. The
diplom ats · a re mi g htil y
embarrassed.

always be a loya l defector."
" How did you get hold of it ?"
"I got il from VII aly just be fore ·
he boat·ded t hep ta ne for Mos cow.
He as ked me to give it to Casey
for sentiment at reasons . When I
tried to de liver th~ Good Book
Casey tu r ned it down and sa id he
di dn't wa n·t a 'defector' who

•

The Ken Amsbary Chapter ol
Izaak Walton .will be sponsoring
slug shoots the next two Sundays
at I p.m . at their club house and
grounds located outside of Pomeroy near Chester. They are also
sponsoring the annual . larges t
whitetail buck and grousetall
contest. For further information
contact Joe Bailey at Eastern
H.S. or any member of l zaak
Walton.
·
Izaak Walton recently held a
very·successful "National Hunt·
lng and Fishing Day" at Royal
Oak resort. Many kids and adults
enjoyed numerous activities and
gained valuable Informa tio n
from the many presentations.
While leafing through some old
papers the other day I collected
some Interesting sports quotes
you might enjoy. They are as
follows:
,
Ohio Unlverslly Coach Cleve
Bryant on tackle David Gaul "I wish I had 95 Davlq Gau ls on
my football team . You can't give
this young · man enough praise.
Whatever you ask him to do, he
says, 'Yes Sir,' and gets the job

done."

By SCOTT NEWMAN
·
UPI Sports Writer
·
Golden State- Coach George._
Karl borrowed some theatrics
from pro wrestling Wednesday
night.
Aftet· bein g fired last March by
the Cleveland· ·Cavaliers, Karl
saldhe"would eome backtothe
Richfield Coliseum ·and ·. whip
'·
. •em .'' ·
.Karl, thanks to an i8·5 run In
the fourth quarter, made good on
his boast wit f) a 112·104 v ictory
over the C,a valiers . Afterward,
the :Warriors' first· year coachacll ng like a profess ional
wrestler - was n' t just satis fi ed
·w uh the victory. After enduring a
chorus of boos throughout the
gam e, Karl had to gloat.
" We stuffed 'em," he said
whipping a Imaginary sword Into
a scabbard. "It feels great . After
a few beers, It' U feel even better. .
Finally, I slapped the hand that
bit me." ,
. Karl, however. won' t be back
for another slap. Unless the two
teams meet In the NBA finals,
Karl, much lo the chagrin of
Cleveland fans , won't be back in
Richfield during the r egu lar
season.
The Joss may have been costly
to the Warriors. Purvis Short,
Golden State" s leadin g scor e r,
scored 21 points ·before leaving
with a kn ee Injury. He is
schedu led to be examined today
In Oakland, Calif.
Greg Ballard, Short's replace·
ment, scored 8 points durin g
Golden Stale's fourth · quart e r
surge. Chris Mullin added 20 for
the Wa rriors. Cleveland lost its
flflh straight game, despll e roogamekle cent
high
er29Brad
points.Daugherty's
The Cavaliers led · 87·86 on
Da ugherty"s layup with10:42 1eft
tn the game. but Ballard' s
jumper s ix seconds lat er gave
the Wa rriors a 88· 87 lead and
Golden Stale never relinquished

Buckeyes
drop 103-76
exhibition tilt

couldn ' t keep his word ."
"Is there anyth ing else in t he
garage sa le I mig ht be int eres ted
. ?''
ln
.

" I have the Whit e House text of
wha t Ronald Reagan sa id to
Gorbachev in Icela nd."
" Whi ch one?"
" Wh at vers ion do you wa nt ?"

'

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Published f'VN.v af!Prnoon , Mon da~
thr oll~l1 F riday, 111 Court St .. Po·
mf'rov. Oh io. by thC' Ohio Va ll ey Pub·
l l~h l n'g Comp:my /Mul! lm«tla. In c..
Pomrroy, Ohio 4~769. P h. 992·215fi. Sr-

. OI&lt;AY,

r;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

OFF
NOW
ALL STONE SET RINGS

Gallipolis

50°/o

Lakers 117, Spurs tOM
Ai San Antonio. Magic .Johnson_·
&gt;cored . 25 point s to lead the :
Lakers to their sevcnt~ consecu· 1
t ive victory. Byron Sco tt scored 9 '
o( his , 2.1' points In .the thll'd :
quarter to help the Lakers enter •
th e final period a head 84·83. The :
Spurs' Alvin Robertson ted all·
play&lt;•rs with .14 polntp. 24 In ·the :
fi rs t ha l f.
·
:

IIG. $319.00

The Daily Sentinel
A

II C0111
So Where Is

Yugoslavian N'lt ional Team to a ,
Ohio76State.
103·
exhibit ion victory over
· Petrovic led · all scorers a nd
made 8 of 11 attempts from
three-point range to ruin the
debut of Buckeyes Coac h Gary
Williams.
·
Ohio Stale was led by senior
guard Denn is Hopson, who
scored 21 of his leam· hlgh 29
points In the fir s t half. but t he
Buckeyes trailed 53-45.
Yu'goslav la s hot 62 per ce nt
from the field, including H of 21
thrE'e·polnt attempls, while Ohio
State made only 2 of 4 attempt s
from three· point range. ,
" Th e w ay t hey shoot the ball is
In c r edi bl e," .Williams sa id.
" They defin itely play a diller ent
sty le of basketball. "

for Detroit.
Suns 111. N.,t, 101
At-·. Phoenix. Mike Sanders
cam e dff the bench to scor e 21
point s and lead the the Suns.
Larry Nanrc scorrd 11 of his Jo
po int s for Phoenix in the openin g
quarter a nd Walt er Davis added
20 point s for th·e Su "'. Orla ndo
Woolridge led th e Nets with 24
points.

rr.~~~==;~i=~~m

THOMA
' S CLOTH.lEIS

TO

WIT~

phia beat New • York. 98,94,
Washington edged DetroII 110·
105, Phoenix routed. New Jer$ey
111·i01 a nd the Los Angeles
Lakers outscor·ed t he San Anlonlo Spu rs 117·108.
Celllcs Ill, Hawks 107
AI Boston, Dennis Johnson hit 3
jumpers In a 2:53 stretch late In
the fourt h quarter and La rry
Blr&lt;fdellvered·a3·point play with
55 seco nds remainin g to defeat
Atlanta . Ke vin McHale.paced t he
·Celt lcs to their 42nd consecutive
triumph at Boston Garden with a
game·hlgit 30 points.
Slxers 98, Knlcks 9.4 .
AI P hil adelp hi a, Roy Hinspn
scored 23 po int s and Tim·McCor·
mlck added 18 to help the 76ers
defeat New York. Six players
scored In double figures for the
Slxers, who led 59· 50 at halftime.
Kenny Wal ker led the Knlcks
with 25 point s, including 17 in the
fi rst half.
BuU els 110, Piston~ 105
At La ndover, Md ., Moses Ma·
lone scored 31 point s and Jeff
Malo ne added 2lto lead Was hin g·
ton. This season, one of t he two
Malo nes have led Was hin gto n in
scoring in 9 of 10 games a nd the
pair has accounted for nea rly '50
percent of the Bullets' point s.
VInnie Johnson scored 20 points

COLUMBUS, Ohi.o tUPI) Drazen Petrovic scored 33 point s
Wednesday night to lead the

nine coaches.

SAVE

the advant age.
"We just couldn't bury t)'o ball
when we- had.....to. and. that's
demoralizing," Cavaliers Coach
,Lenny Wilkens said. "The physl·
cal play Is part pf the gal)]e a nd
you can' t make ali bls abou I it . ·
Golden State.made the s hots they
hadlo a ndwe dldn't. "
In other games, Boston ·de·
featect Atlanta 111·107, Phlladel·

"

TOL EDO, Ohio (UP!) - Un·
beaten Ohio Athlef.lc Conference
c hampion .Mount Union placed
nine pla yer s on the 1986 AII·OAC
fir st team chosen by the league's
Mount Union also had three
"players selected to the second
team. while Baldwln· Wallac~
was awarded seven spot s on the
first team a nd also Had six
players named to the seco nd.
Muskingum, which lied with
B·W lor second place, had 11
players named Ia the squad five on the first team and six on
t he second.

•
edge.Hawks; , Cavs ·lose agatn
.

Celti~s

A couple wee ks .ago I wrote a
· Sprint car racing drlv~r Doug
few words about the Eastern
Wolfgang on his Image - "lt' s
band, · but the copy became hard for me to explain, but I !Ike
misplaced. So I'll put m y meJohn Sawyer (author and wrller
mory to the tes t and.try again!
for Stock Car arid Open Wheel
· While watching the Eastern
Magazines) a lot, but when
High School Marching Band
people read a story he writes
practice dur{ng Its final week of about me, people think I grew up
preparation for the slate compewith the Cowboys and Indians In ·
tition at Lanca~ter , I quickly
Sioux Falls, South Dakota and
realized the · 1u~urles and ex·
shot guns ... ll's nothing like that. .
treme comfort of the rough
Sioux Falls Is a beautiful clly. ·
riding t ractor that I was driving.
People have no Idea though, yet
Enjoying the rough riding trac·
they think I ,grew up wllh the
tor you as k? We'll In relation to
Cowboys with cleats on my boots
all the huslle and hard work
and spurs and six guns and all ... "
taking place at the band practice
Boston relief pitcher Dave
field, I became quite tired just · Crawford on his game-~lnnlng
watching. ·And besides the fr ee
catch in game five of the
e nte r tainment was great.
American League Championship
Three consecutive nights I
series - "I was so happy ... my
worked ' on our. high school
first thoughts were to look for the
baseball field, butt he-tractor and 1 nearest r estroom."
I didn ' t wor)&lt; nearly . as hard as
Evel Knlevel, famous molc rcy·
the EHS band. Surprisingly, not
cle · ~aredevll - "II' s bette r to
only did they work .hard but they . take a c hance In life, to win a
were having fun as well, as they
victory or to suffer defeat, even
e njoyed the proflls of a well·
though scarred by failure ... than
polished fin ished product. .
ills to Jive in the shadow of life as
In addition to great execution,
some do , never knowing a victory
'the band sounds great as well! I
or defeat because theY, .have not
hope the band co ntinues to work
the guts to try either!!"
just as hard and continues to
Former Tiffin Calvert grid
Instill pride within the school, for
coach and former Meigs Coun·
each member has much pride in
llan Roger Kirkhart - " You
what he does.
can't just wish for a champion·
The band placed very well at
ship ... You have to work for II."
th e sta te competition and won
In closing l'd.llke to say, "lake
numerous awards and superior
a chance, work (oward your
goals, and get the job done, while
living the right kind of life" and
I'll see you In the victory circle:

me,

•

ratings · t hroughout the year.
Congratulations to director Bill
Hall and the EHS band for a job
well done !
Anplher example of hard work
paying off!
·
Th~ second time around my
story wasn't as good, but never·
the-le$S It establishes the same
point.

Mount Union has 9
on ~Dream Team'

Russkie garage sale --:---:-----A_r_tB_u_ch_wa_Ld
I live around I he corne r from walking.through the White Hou se
the Soviet E mbassy in Washin g· with a little bab~· under her arm.
ton . The other day I saw a c rowd "A ll I had to do was say the baby
in front of It and as ked a n FBI wa s a 'Right to Life' poster child
man dressed as parking meter a nd they le t me phol ograph
m a id wha t was go ing on.
everything In the Oval Office."
" li 's a gar age sale bein g hel d
"Are you an ex per t on microby the Russ ians who were booted film ?" I asked her.
out of the Un it ed States. You can
"No. but I know what I'! ike."
get some great buys on Afghani
" Why are y ou selling t.hem
wool potholders a nd Andropov rather t han ta kin g them back to
as htrays with secr et tape re- the Soviet Union ?"
corders Ins ide."
Shr r eplied, "If you are a n
I wandered over to one of the Ame rican you get a fo rtune from
br idge tabl es. The So'-'iet E m· Moscow on Star Wa rs mater ial.
bassy employee sa id to
"Can If you're a Russ ian they tell you
I int erest you In Navy submarin e It's your duty to turn It over to the
codes that have only been used mol her land for free. This Is my
once? They come in this beautifu l last chance In America to m ake a
Statue of Libert y key ring a nd bu ck."
can e~s ily be hl&lt;)den In ~
I wandered over to the tabl e
pumpkin."
a nd saw a framed sliver photo.
' ' No. tha rik you," I said. " I
" Is that who I think It is?" I
stopped coll ecting subm ari ne asked. ·
·
codes aft er Admiral Rlckover
The Russ ian E mbassy man '
died ."
smiled. "This is . a genuine
" Then perhaps l ca n whet your autographed photo of the Arilerl·
a ppetit e with stol en blu eprints of can spy J ohn Walker. It Is
the Stealth bomber. They make dedicated to me and say's.
ex trem e ly co lo r ful wall 'Tovarlch,l couldn' t have done it
decorat ions."
without you."'
· I said, " I wouldn't know one
" That Is a very sentimental
stolen blueprint from t he other. memento. Why are you unload·
How can I be sure t hey're lng II at a garage sale?"
genuine?"
"l have hundreds of them.
"Each a nd every one of them John gave me a picture every
has been authenticated by Ca p l im e he commllted an a ct of
Weinberger. We Sov iets do not treason. The o nly one I won' t sell '
deal In phony American bl eu· Is this picture of .(ohn ~ellln g ·oul
prints. That's why we' re be in g his s on to the FBI.. It was taken
kicked out of your country."
from a bak ery by one of our best
t told him I would be back. The KGB photograpers at F 4 a nd
next ta ble featured microfilm of 1/ JOOth of a second"
Reagan's Star Wars plan.
"What Is this book here?"
"It's
the Bible Vllaly Yur·
A Soviet E mbassy lady man·
chenko
swore
on when he prom·
nln g the s tand was selling microlsed
Willia
m
Casey
that he would_
film which she had taken while

A:rea cage fans get first
glimpse of players Fri~ ·
By Scott WoUe
Sentinel News Stall
The 1986 Southern Valley AI·
hletlc Conference (SVAC) bas·
ketball previews will lake on a·
different format this season as
· not all clubs wlll play on the same
night. Thl~ year' s·prevlew·wm be
this F r iday and Saturday, Nov.
21 &amp; 22 a t Kyger Creek.
. In th e past the girls'" squads
(rom each Jea,gue school would
meet on Friday evening and the
boys clubs would play the follow·
lng night. .This · year, however,
boys and girls from four different
schools wUJ meet each night ,
featuring four half·games as in
the past.
The biggest reason· forcing
league authorities to make the
switch was to eliminate o~er·
crowding In the Kyger Creek
gymnasium , the .only welcomed
centralized site available due to a
conflict with ·the . Rio Grande
College Gymnasium. ·
The first game Friday pits the
Southern girls ag~lnst Southw.
estern. folfowed by, the boxs'
teams from•each school at 7 p.ln.
At 8 p.tn. Kyger Cteek wlll host
Oak Hlll' s gals folloWed by the
boys' bout about 9 p.m.
Saturd'a y; North Gallla chal·
lenges•Hannan Trace's gals at 6
p.m . while the boys ' slate follows
around 7 p.m. Eastern meets
Symmes Valley In the finale as
the g ir ls meet at 8 p.m. a nd the
boys at 9 p.m .
Admission will . be $2.50 for
adu Its· and $1 for students.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

· • Pomeroy- Middleport, 01\io

(614) 922-642 1
'

.'

"

*·

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thll'lday, November 20, 1986

PomerD't' M":t" Irort OIWo

Phils' Mike Schmidt named NL's MVP
MinnS~

.
NATIONAL BASKETBALL
...,
r\SSOC.
By Unltf'd Prftlos lnt ernllt'toaW

EastO"n Conference
Adailtlc Dlv'-"lon ·

.

..
'','

W.· L· )'ct.
1 ! .m
1 I .li36
1 6 . .400
3 8 .27S
~ M .200

BOoton
Philo
w..hlnatn
New \'ork
New JeMiey

Central Division
Atlanta
1 ! · .778
Mllwauke
7 ~ .636

Chi c.,..

I 3 .6!5
6 .a .600
3 6 .333

indhw~t

O.tro·( ' le\'(.&gt;land

3

7 .00.0

I
3\\
5

Denver

L
3
3
3,
5

Sacramnt

3

6 .333

San Antonio

3

7 .:JI)O

1¥1
1%
1
.a ~

P el . GO
.ti25 .62:1
.500
.510

:!~4

Clenlund .at A..tlanta. 7:30p.m:

Utah at Houstoa. 8:30p.m.
Por.tiWid at Denver, 9:30P.m.
Dallllli at LA CUpp.,.,., IO;:Jil p.m.
lndlan11 at Sat:ramenlo. 10 : 30

p.m.

MUwauktte al. S.OaUie. IO::JQ p.m.
FrtdiQ''s Gamt'H
Golden Stait• iU Boston, nJ.-ht
DetroJC at Pblltwle lphla. night
Hou!Oioa at \\'Q.NhinKton, night
New \ 'ork at Ch1cagv, nighl
DaJI,.. a1 Pho-. nll!hl
New Jersey at LA ~kt!' s, night
San Anloolo at Portland, nl~~:hl

WttlfN ConlererH.'f'
l"atrh.'k Dlv~ion
W L T Pis. GF GA
PhUa
.12 4 2 26 i5 ~3
Ptt•hi;
II 6 ! t4 16 G4
Nw ,Jrsy
10 i 2 tl 73 ~::1

..
.•

Adams

71 53
63 K2
69 80

Dlv~ion

Monlrl

II a :1 25
K H .a ~
Hurt frd
7 G 3 17
Bostoo
7 9 :i 17
Buffalo
~ II ~ II
Ca mpbell ConiiTm te

QuciJ4•c

73 62
7i tiH
~ 60

&amp;I 611
62 6!i

Norrk Dlvf.ilon
1
\\
I. T PI"'. GF C. ,\
Toront o

951~2633:1

St. Lou._
Delroll

K 5 .a 00

61 56

.ChiC'.t~l

710

.&amp; II 5 1:1

50 00
fH Hfi

l · lii

Falcons favorite in
.•, MAC basketball race

:r:

TOLEDO , Ohio iUP)) - Bo-wllng Green State Unlverslly has
:1 :been picked to win the '1986· 87
·-: Mld · Amerlcan Conference
• women's l&gt;asketball champion·
ship In balloting by the league's
•• head coaches.
The coaches, meetIng In
Toledo Wedn esday, gave Bo• wlln g Green five of nin e first·
:: place votes. The Falcons tied
.• with Central Michigan for second .
in t he ~AC last year.
Western Michigan, which tied
•. with Ball State for !ouurth In the
• league last season. received
• three first place votes for second
: &gt; place.

.:f

p.m.

Tororto at N\' hJIUidt!'s, 8:05
p.m.

.

.

DELCO BATTERY
SS.OO REBATE SALE

Football Scht'tlul('

By United Prtfls Internal tonal
(n):Night Rame
"' um..-aJ In parenth eMJI denotftl
nt'Ulrlll s it I!

t?OMI! TEAM .OPPONI!NT

Thursday, No\'. ri
,\luhwn4' St.-Tuslu:•gt'l'
Mluml. Fla.·EIL.o«. Carnllna (n)
Tt&gt;;(!l"&gt;·Texu.o; A&amp;M
Frldas. Nov. 'a!
\'iriOnht·Maryhmd
s .. turday. No,·. :l9

S41 95

$3 495,

·t\laharna-1\ uhurn IH

Florida A&amp;M-BetOOnefookman
(2 )
(n ~
Gt.oorr:ta-Gt'or~a Tl'(:h
H~twtt.II - Wylfnlng- (n)
Houslon-Rk~ (11 )

Florida St .·florld.a

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Reg. 2.99, lil!lil 2

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For most foreign applieations
Reg. J.95.1imit 2

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Vandt.. hili·Tt nn e;see

....

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Arizona-Stanford 0 )
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Transartions
Bosket,.dl

\\'as hln~on - Acthruted xuard
Enn~ Whatlf)'; plac:fd forwxrd
.Juy MurptJ.v on Injured ll"l.
l&lt;' oothall
Buffulo - Slgned · n~nnlng ba(•it
Bruce KlnJt.
lndlunapollti - Plac ed r eceiver
Rl'1bbl r Martin on Injured r ftiierve·
l'l igned re«:e~ver .rameK Harhour '
Mlnn()(cXIt- Re-s l~ed QUW't~
h~tc k Sl:t&gt;ve Bono. Wai\'ed defensl\' l

Sat. t a.m. till 4:00

,_m.

Sat. I c:M'I til .. P"

I a.m. till 5:00 p.m.

M IJtJI

44¢

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ICE

_..,.,

Allwrellllt

.... Resistor

44tl--

Reg. 94c,llllllt 16

64¢
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Antifreeze
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2 Ye• Autollte Gu.rantee

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message

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12.88 14.88

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Replace thermostat

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Grid schedules
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Friday'"' Gam(!ii
St.' Louis at Hart ford. nlr;hl
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\\'UNhJngton at Dctroli, nl&amp;hl
LoN Angl'l!!S at Wlnnlpt&gt;g, nlrr;ht
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NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGl'E

NYRn~

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NHL results

10 j I 21
110 3 11
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PhlhuJelpbla 98, New l 'ork 9.J
Bostoa Ill. AUanta 107
Washlngtoo 119, Detrolil 10:1
Golden stat e 11 2, Cl{'\leland 10-1
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. 11 12 ~ 12 ill 7i
WedJltJriday• ~ Resuls
New Jerst.Y ~. D e troit 3

l...sAng~
Van.tov[

Thun.:d.y' sGam eK '
Montrt!'&lt;ll at Boston. '1 :3~ p. m.
Chtcaco ut Philadelphia. 7:35

'/'lw,~ l/1,: .•. t;""''"'

.

7$ 5t

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113 10

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M'edn~day·~ ~ult .o;

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K I ~

Philadelphia 2, Torotio 2 Ule)
Los t\nA'eii'IO 4, C hlca,;o' " Ule}
St. Lou6 7, Minn&amp;t011l5
E dmunton 5, NY Ran~ers .a (OT )

PaciOc Div~lon
LA W ers
7 1 .815 Seattle
5 4 .556 2%
Golden Sial
5 5 .iiOO 3
l'ho mix
5 5 .ro(IO :1
Portland
5 5 .iiOO 3
LA CllppiJ'S
3 1 .300 .1

..

12

n'"'"""
8 I t)

PHILADELPHIA (llF.'b BBWAA in 1931. Musial won in winners are in 1he Hall 6f F'ame. !1191 and slugging percentage
Mike Schmidt and the baseball 1943, 1946 and ,1948 a.nd Campa·
Schm idl played i his season for (.54i ).
fans of Philadelphia have had an nella was the.winner in 1951 , 1953 a team 1hat finished 211·2ga mes
He led NL third l&gt;asemen in
uneasy relationship the past 14 and 1955.
·
ix&gt;hind
I
he
Mels
in
the
NL
Ea
st
.
fielding per cenla~e with a .980 '
years.
·
Four players ha,·e won the He played in 16!1 game&lt; despite mark. committing only six er.
For many years; Schmidt was award three tim es in the Ameri·
aching knees and. various othet· rors in :104 chances.
a targef of boo \li~ds every time ~an League: Jimmy Foxx 11932· ali
ments . He.. hil .290..,. his bcsl
sChmlllt. who could l!ecome
he struck out · in a crucial ·. 33-38), Joe DiMaggio (1939- 41·
average
in
.ti
ve
years
and
the
lhe
first NL player to win the
situation. Schmidt occasionally 47), Yogi Berra (1951· 54·551 and
second·
highcsl
of
his
15-year
MVP
Award four times .. named
struck back, criticizing the fa ns Mickey Mantle (1956- 57·621.
career
and
led
lhe
league
In
two
.factors
In the.fans' change In
and their attitude.
All. six Ptevious three-time home runs !371. runs balled In al i itude toward him.
This past season, how ever,
Schmidt overcame sore knees
and nagging injuries to lead the
National League In horne runs
and RBI. Velerans Stadium
crowds responded more warmly
td the veteran slugger.
And Wednesday, Schmidt be·
came the third player in NL
.
THE TRI·STATES' MOST
. history to receive the Most
Valuable Player Award three
times.
The 37-year-old third baseman
was a runaway winner In ballot·
lng by 24 members of the
Baseball Writers' Association of·
America - two from each NL
city. Finishing second w'as Hous·
ton first baseman Glenn Davis.
FREEDOM II SO MONTH GUARANTEE
Schmidt received 15 first·
place votes and 287 points while
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
Davis had six flrst ' place votes
and231 points. Gary Carterofthe
New York Mels came In third
q,,f,l&lt;
'1 '' '11
with one flrst·place vote and 181
• I I h I~ ~ ~ I
All1ll ,,11\A II
points.
"This is quite an experience for
me," Schmldl said. " II was like
the end of a polit leal campaign
the way the Most Valuable
. DURA POWER 72
Player voting went, ·But any way
•650 cOld cnn*ing amps
you slice it, winning the National ·
in an l-inch case.
• Mtlftttntnct·fret never
League MVP, It's an honor.
tdd
wtttr,
no·worry,
"The most encouraging thing
Htltd·for·llft balttry.
SALE
about the 1986 baseball senson
PRICE
was the warmth, enJ;:Quragement
• Available with sldt or top
and respect comiiiJ! out of the
po1t termlnlltln slzu to
lit virtually every "' G. ~ : -11
stands to me. That was somelight truck on tht ro1d.
thing special. It's the one thing
I'll cherish the most."
Rounding out the top 10 voteTEXACO.
gellers were Kelt h Hernandez of
ANTI-FREEZE
the Mets, Cincinnati's Dave
Parker, Montreal's Tim Raines,
COOLANT
Houston's Kevin Bass, Phlladel·
phia's Von Hayes, San Diego's
Tony Gwynn and Houston's Mike
Ullll
U11111
.UT RUSH (QOI.WG 5Y5T81
Scott, the NL Cy Young Award
11 11.
st&amp;UI
winner.
·
11 II· ·
AnER· IfllT£ ON
Schmidt joins Stan Musial of
2 GAUON IIIR&lt;MAll
the St. Louis Cardinals and Roy
EACH
Campanella of the Brooklyn
' '"FLDIILE TO ~ IROW 0""
Dodgers as the only three- time
winners of the NL MVP since the
GALLIPOLIS
.
POMEROY MASON '
award was started by the
240 Third AYe. " 1704 Eastem Au. SIS Main St. 261 Jackson A••· 119 W. 2nd An. Routo 33 •
675 -1520
675-2731
446- 1113
446-4204
92-2139
773-5511
O.ily lw.rn. till .5:30 p.m. Dailw I a.m. tD 7:00 p.m. .

PUt!!ihur«f! at Ca.l r;al')', 9:35p. m.

W
5
5
!i
5

DaU •

I~

3~

Conrwence
Mldwe-;1 Dl\'islon

Utah

Smythe

falgry

GB

- ·

\\'~I em

'Houlitoo

Wnnp g ,
Edmn

~

The Daily Seucinel

.

.

Store houro: 8:30a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Monday thrau~ h Frlday, da
8:30a.m. to 1:00 p.m. llturdty llld 10:00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. 8 un y.

I

&lt;

•

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

~

�·.

'

,.

•r

'

'

The Daily Sentinei-P~ge-1~~

'

ThUfsdaY. November 20, 1986

''

Marc Howard, Chris Stotts, and Dale Johnston. •
Second row, Terry Miller, Denny Welsh, Jared
Sheets, Paul Brlckles, Don Bunce, and Jell Hood.
The Marauder grapplers are coached by Kevin
Sheppard.

MEIGS WRESTLING TEAM - The .1986-87
Meip wrestling squad have hopes ol asuccesslul
campaign with a strong nucleus ol veteran .
wrestlers. In the llrst row !rom left are Butch
Stein, Wes Howard, Paul Wolle, PatJ! Dailey,

Chargers face Raiders this·evening
'
SENIORS - Five seniors leading the 1986-87
Meigs Marauderette bas ketball team Include

!rom left, Nancy Blankenship, Julie Miller, Jenny
Miller, Jenni Swartz, and Jennl Coach.

Michigan picked over.OSU, 24-14
_ By JOEL SHERMAN
. UPI Sports Writ er
Michigan (minus 2\ji ) over·
Ohio State- In a weekend loaded
with rivalries, this ranks as one
of the best and most important.
The winner plays Arizona State
in the Rose Bowl and the loser the
Southwest Conference champ in
thi';Cotton Bowl.
l!_efor e last week's upset by
Minnesota, Michigan was unde·
fea ted and hoping for a nationa l
title. Now .the Wolverines face
their most bit ter foe. The Buckeyes have won nine straight after
sta rting0-2. They haveone oflhe
couiltry' s fi nest defens ive players: in linebacker Chris Spiel'ma nn and a deadly tandem of
quarterback Jim Karsatos and
receiver Cris Carter. Last year in
a 27 ·17 victory dver Ohio· State.
Ml&lt;:hlgan's Jim Harbau gh was
splendid in completing 16 of 19
throws for 230 yards and three
touchdowns. Expect anot her big
performance from Harbaugh.
Michigan 24. Ohio State 14
East
Penn State (minu s 141 over
Plt£sburgh - Without starting
QB: John Cangemi. Pitt cannot
stay. with a Nlttany Lion team
thili knows a victory provides a
shot at the nationa l title.
Penn Stale 42. Pittsburgh 13
Temple (m lnu ~ 1'h 1 over
Rut_gers- Owls RB Paul Palmer
makes his final statement for the
Hels man Trophy.
Tt&gt;mple 34. Rulgers 7
South
Notre Dame (plus 5r over
Louisiana State- Regardl ess of
Notre Dame's 4-5 record and
penchant for losing tight games.
Lair Holtz keeps the Irish playing
har.Jl, even In the Ba!On Rouge
night.
Notre Dame 20, Louisiana
state 14
Wake Forest (p lus 71 over
GI!Orgia Tech- Yellow Jack ets
ey~ a bow l but musl beware

Some officials
•ground' Bengals'
attack offense
ciNC INNATI (UP II - The
Cincinnati Bengals' no-huddiP
"atlack o ffe ns e" has been
gro unded several times this
season by . officials. and coach
Sa in Wyche has no explanation
wtiy.
'"It seems to be a problem from
w~k to week." Wy_
c he sa id. "It's
a problem with different crews.
It'S: not just one crew having a
problem with it."
The tactic is similar to the
two-minute offense teams use at
the end of the half or t he game1~ Bengals run several plays In
s u ~esslon without a huddl e. The
dlff!&gt;rence Is the Ben ga ls a ren't
"trying to save time. but ra ther
are attempt lng to confuse the
deiense or catch th&lt;' opponent
w~ h too many men on the field.
The Ben gals accompllshed just
th a~ once In last week's gam e
against Seatt le. but the officials
bll'!\f the play dead and allowed
the ·Seahawks to regroup. The .
same thing has h appen~ several
otlier times Ihis season.
il'he league has said one reason
for the whistles L~ that the ball
haS to hi! spotted and made ready
tor r· lay before It can be snappcil.
:• ihlnk what's happening,
mi&gt;fe than anything else. Is
hete's an evolution of.the game.
and all cha nge meet s wit h some
foJim of resistance. some form of
mlllunderstandlng as It takes
piace," Wyche said.
·"fle're just going through It
~ause we happen to be one of
tlie few teams doing It from week
t&lt;t.week."
:f{yche said the Ben gals coach·
!llf staff has some theories on
~officials won't the m use the
hu·rry-up offense.

,,

•

high-scor ing Demon Deacons.
upset would help even more.
Georgia Tech 34, Wake Fores t
Baylor 17, Texas 13
31
Arkansas (minus 3) over
Midw est
Sou thern Methodist - Fu rther
. Ne braska (plus 8'h l over Okla- trouble in SMU foo(billl pr.ogram
homa - Cornhus )!.ers keep It hurt s Miistangs.
t!ghl before home crowd . As
Arkansas 23. Southern Methousua l. though, Oklahoma finds a dist 10
way to win.
West
Oklahoma 21. Nebraska 20
Souther n Ca l (plus 3\-21 over
Iowa (minus 5) over Minnesota UCLA - Ryan Knight's running
- The Gophers won their Super and Rodney Peele's passing keep
Bowl las t week In beating Michi- . USC rolling..
ga n. Hard to believe they are
Souther n Cal 28, UCLA 21
ready for another Big Ten upset.
Arizona (p lu s 3\ji 1 over Ariz·
fowa needs to get il s game back on a State - Arizo na has beaten
wit h bow ls approaching.
Su n Devils · last four times.
Iowa 35, Minesota 20
Wildcats would lov e to inflict
Southwest
first loss on their big rival.
Texas (plus 7\-2 I over BaylorArizonal27. Arizona State 24
Longhorns have played the last
Last week - 2·8
,
two weeks like a team that does
Season record - 55-64
not want Fred Akers fired .-An
Feature game - 8-4

SAN DIEGO (UP!)- The San
Diego &lt;; hargers will aim .the
NFL's best ·pass rush at Jim
Plunkett and his 38· year· old legs
tonight, try ing to stop his stillliv ely arm from beating their
vulnerable seci&gt;nda ry. . .
-Plunkett threw three touch:
down passes in ihe Los Angeles
Raiders' 27-14 victory over Cleveland last week. SiJ1Ce replaci ng
Mar c Wilson at halftime agains t
Dall as two weeks ago, Plunkett
has thrown five touchdowns four to speedy Dokie Wllllams.
Los Angeles has won seven qf
eight after an 0-3 start to get back
in the playoff plctu r~.
Off Plunkett's recent' s how- ·
lngs. Raiders Coach Totn Flores
is sure hi s quarterback will
perform well on three days' rest.
1
'1! would concern me if Jim

had been'pta ying all year and he
was worn do~·.n a lit tle bJt f~.om
the 11 games, Flores sa1d. He
really hasn · t played mu ch and he
was very fresh on Sunday. He
still is fres h.
"But I dpn' t lik et Thursday
ga m es, even for youn ger
people."
.
The 9-2 Chargers will play
without Dan fouts In the starting
lineup for the fourth tim e in five
weeks. Fouts suffered a s houlder
inju ry in Sunday 's 24-21 loss to
the Cowboys and will be replaced
by Tom Flick. Fouts had missed
the. Chargers' three previous
games after su ffePlng two
concuss ions.
The Chargers pummeled Steve
Pelluer. , Dallas' young qu ~rter­
back. last week, recording a n
NFL-record-(ylng 12 sacks.

.

N
. ICE
•

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------

whipp ed Al exa nd er 43·25.
Federal-Hocking blasted Vinton
Cou nty 47-20. an d Athens nipped
Nelsonvllle-York 32-28.
In th e girls' preview at Trimble
Sa tu r d ay, fi ve two"quarter
games are on tap with the first
game beginning at 5 p.m. a nd the
others followhig at 6, 7. 8, and 9.
All nine TVC teams will be on
handalongwlth SEOAL member
Warren Local.
Caoch Ron Logan 's Ma rauderettes tied with Saturd ay's foe
Federal-Hocking last· year for
second place In the TVC behind
champion Alexander.
The . Meigs boys open the
season for keeps next Tuesday at
Athens In a non-league ga me
while the Ma rauderettes open
their season nex t Wednesday at
home againsl Eastern ..

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l~es.

· Shannon Newsome. Audra Houdashelt, Kenda
Klo es, Shannon Slavin, Nikki Whitlatch, M arsh~~
King, Deanna Haggy, Lesley Carr, Kelly Douglas ,,
Beth Ewing, Cathy Hobstelter, and Jody Taylor.

IN MASON, WE~T VIRGINIA

Mfn , ''"'" ,.,, 1:........ . , .... .

--:-

Both the Meigs boys and girls
basketball squads play twoqu arter preview games thIs
weekend as the boys take on
Vinton County a t 7 p.m. Friday In
the Annual Athens Shrine Pre·
view and the MHS girls play
against Federal-Hocking at 7
p. m. Saturday at the Trimble
TVC Preview.
The TVC-defendlng champ ion
Marauders of flrst year coach ·
Mlck Childs meet Vinton County
in the first of four two-qu arter
games F riday night at Athens
High School.
In the ga me s following,
Nelsonville· York plays Alexander at 7:45, Logan meet s
Federal-Hocking at 8:30, and
Athens goes against Trimble In
the fi nal e at 9:15.
In games last year, Meigs
defeated Trimble 28-22, Logan

1982 PONTIAC
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'
.
MHS GIRLS RESERVE TEAM - .The Meigs
Marauderelle 1986-87 girts' reserve basketball
team open their season at home with Eastern on
Wednesday, November 26. Pictured from left are

Danny Westmoreland, D.O. _

ENGLISH lEATHER

EXTRA STRENGTH

.
Meigs boys meet V~ton County in
Athens preview;.girls play Lancers
~------~~====~~~---.----

BEREA. Ohio {UPil - Start in g a rookie nam ed Harper has
worked for the Cleveland Caval!·
ers. so pe~h aps the Cleveland
Browns ar e followin g th at
example.
Mark Harper Is no relat !on to
Cavaliers guard Ron Harper,
who leads all NBA rookies In
scoring, but the first-year corner·
back hopes his Impending first
start Sunday against P ittsburgh
wUI be as productiv e.
"A ll I can do Is go out there and
do my best," says Harper. a
cornerback from Alcorn State
who made the team as an
unheralde&lt;l free agent. "I'm
nervous. but I 'm not scared. I
know the Steelers won't be
intimidated by me, so I :d better
be ready to face t hem."
Cleveland coach Mart y Schot·
lenhelmer Jndicaled Wedn esday
that the team has confidence In
Harper's ability to handle Frank
Minnifield's starting spot. Minn ifield has a seV.erely sprained calf
muscle.
"He can do the job," said the
coach. "He can play man-to- man
and bump and run. We're not
going to c hange the ·system
because one guy's hu rt."
As Harper prepares for his
malden start, quarterback Gary
Danielson and strong safety AI
Gross are working out this week
as each struggles to return from
Injury.

$199

$169

before losing to Germantown. In front !rom the
left are Tammy Wrlghlo Shelly Slobart, Missy .
Wood, Wendy Fry , and Dee Henderson. In b!'c,k
are Coach Logan, Jennl Couch, Jennl Swartz,
Jenny Mlller, Julie Miller, Nancy Blankenship, .
and manager Wendt Kloes. Abs~nt was manager
Amy Satterfield.
.

Harper ·
nenrous

SPECIAL SALE!
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DEFEND TITLE
Defending class AA
sectional apd district girls' basketball champion
Meigs, pictured above, .kick off their 1986·87
cam pall" Wednesday, November 26 at home with
Eastern. Coach Ron Logan returns fiv e starters
from last year's 19-5 Marauderette five that
reached the stale's "~weet sixteen" reglonals

' (located next to Wahama High School in the former
offic, of Dr. Thomas McGowan.)

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�,•

'

: Page-S-The

Sentinel

By BRANT NEWMAN
YOUNGSTOWN iUPI L - An
Ohio Education Association offl-'
r ial confirmed Wedn~day that a
Youngstown City School District
teacher who s harply cr~t icized
her student s has been trans-

ferred to a not he•· school.
Nico le!'n- Dodd was ·temporarily removed from he r post at
East High School Nov, 6 aft er she

Grand jury
indicts Ohio.
•
mine
owners
'

ants Fork

each

an

accurate

.3·- 0°/o
OF'
I "

GROUP OF.

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'" •

ALL ·

SWIVEl. ·
RECINERS

END TABLES
-&amp; COFFIES

NAME AND PHONE# OF PERSON IN CHARGE :

Description of Entry _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

NO
RIDE

(Circlo)
(Circlo)
,

·Rerum entry 10 thl Pomeroy Ch1mber Offk:e, Courthou•e. 2nd Street.
'Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 "'phone 992 -6005 .

Betty Lee Porter, worthy St. Albans Chapter ·19, Ceredo's
grand matron and Denver Ro- Marcum Chapter 61; Charie:;ton
berts, worthy grand patron of the Chapter 88; Guyandotte Chapter
Grand,Jurisdiction of West Vll"gl- 89, Huntington; BarboursvUie
nla, Order of the Eastern Star, Chapter 95; Kenova Chapter 11;
season .
vis!ted Mason Chapter 157, at the Clara Edna ·c hapter 140, ParThe group in· Winner of a video ~assette
chapter
hall recently .
kersburg; Williamstown Chapcludes Don Zerrecorder as.the result of a project
.
Ann
Blake,
worthy
matron,
ter
58; H~ntington Cliapter, 8;
kle, Jr., a six
held at the Budoryu Dojo of Tae
and
Oscar
Casto,
worthy
patron
Kanawha Chapter 38, Montgo· Kwon Do lrt Middleport was Mrs.
point IJuck aild
of
Mason
Chapter,
welcomed·
mery; VIenna Chapter 151; ·St.
button buck: Ken Roush, a button Sharon Meadows, Route 4,
members
and
guests
from
sevMarys
Chapter 31, and Delaware
buck; Terry Brown, a 10 point • Pomeroy .
eral
chapters
Including
Mason,
Chapter
7.
'
·
buck; tom Wilson; an eig)lt point
Point
Pleasant
75,
Queen
Esther
Jane
Wise
was
soloist
for.
the
Paul Gerard will hea(l this
buck; Ed . Turley, a doe 'and
, Chapter 11, Clarksburg; Chapter meeting accompanying herself
~ohnny Ohlinger, a doe.
year's Pomeroy Chamber of
·
·
73, Grarisville; Evangeline Chap- at the piano. Monetary gifts were
Commerce Christmas parade.
AWARD
PRESENTEDLisa
Hawk,
right,'
receiv
es
a
$25
cash
ter 172, Middleport: Chapter 207, · presented to the Grand officers to
The parade will be at 2 p.m. on
It's no disgrace to gel lire aWard
from_
Andrea
Blanchard,
manager,
for
having
heen
one
of
Wilkesville;
Aurelson Chapter be given to Cancer, Heart Fund,
but It Is to keep them.
·
Sunday, Nov. 30. "An Old Fashl·
the lop three employees at the Hocking Valley Inn.
60. Macksburg; Marietta Chap- ESTARL and Youth Services.
In the Interest of providing oned Christmas" will be carried
ter 59; Minerva Chapter 274.
aware classes to educate the out in the theme. The parade will
Guysvill
e; Albany Chapter 558;
During the inspection of Mason
general public on head lice and kick off the merchant associaHarrisonville
Chapter
255;
Par157. two new members ·
Chaper
how to get rid of them, Norma tion 's annual open house. If you .
kersburg
Chapter
14:
Cottagewere
Initiated
Into the order.
Lisa Hawk, daughter of Mr. education, reports.
Torres, R.N., supervisor · of have an questions or want
16:
Salina
Chapter
refres
hments were
Potluck
ville
Chapter
and Mrs. Roger Hawk of ReedsHawk received a $25 gift
nurses at the Meigs County lnformatlon on the parade call
81,
Malden.
served
during
a
concluding soville, a hotel restaurant managecert ificate. }locking Valley Inn is
He all h Department, will offer a 992-5005.
Sou
th
Char.leston
Chapter
1
~1:
ci al hou r.
ment student at Hocking Technia full service public facilit y,
class at 6 p.m. Monday at the
owned by Hocking. Technical
Observing a birth.d ay anniver- . cal College, Nelsonville, has been
health department quarters · on
College, and is a laboratory site
named one of three outstanding
sary today is Diane Ash and
Mulberry Heights.
employees. of Hocking Valley Inn
for sludents in hot ell -restaurant
The film strip, "Lice are marking anniversaries on Sunfor
October,
·or.
Joseph
F.
management and culinary arts
day
will
be
Betty
Ohlinger
of
lnsects Too" will be shown for
Lancaster.
dean
.
of
academic
technologies.
and
Phllamena
FoiMiddleport
the first 15 minutes and then a
lecture and dfscusslon wUI ' be l rod of Pleasant Ridge,
held. Lileraturewili be provided. ' Pomeroy .
The entIre.class should take only
The Meigs Branch of the of 1he budoryo dojo including
F ull cast rehearsals for Variean hour and Is open to all
exam ples of self-defense. free
ties of '86 will be held Monday Budoryu Dojo, 26 North Second
Interested persons.
fighting, judo, aikido. jiu jutsu,
Ave .. Middleport, will host its
Seems as though li ce are on the and Friday eveningS, next week,
defense
against. weapons, dem fr
om
first
Inter-club
tournament
at 7:30 p.m. as the group moves
Sharp.
ra mpage th is fa,ll
onstrations
with classical ~~~~::a·
,
1
to
.
1
p.m.
.Sunday
at
the
Rutland
Into the Rutland Civic Center to
unfortunately.
pons. and a demonstration of
polish up for show night 0~ Civic Center.
board
and concret e breaking.
Students from Mei gs. Jackson
The Church of God Chester Saturda y, Nov. 29th. Dress reThe
tournament Is open to the
and Gallia branches of the dojo
Christian Academy · with 18 stu- hearsal will be held at fhe Friday
public.
Admission is $1 with
wUJ . be compel ing In kat a
dents. kindergarten 'through evening rehearsal. .
c hildren '• under elght admitted
(forms ! and kumlte lflghtlngl.
grade 12, will hold a public open
free
of charge.
Demonstrations
wUI
be
presThe Belles and Beaus West
house from 7 to 9 p. m. Friday at
ent
ed
.
b
y
students
and
Instructors
the school. The school is located Square . Dance Club will be
just outside Chester on Route881 sponsoring a dance from 8 to 11
Auto.
near the former golf course. p.m. Saturday at Royal Oak
Resort Park with Chad Johnson
Work of students Including art
.
.
doing
the calling.
Auto .. air.
and home economics will be
displayed and refreshments will
The reason you shou Jd learn
be served ..
from the mistakes of others is
like New.
.
:
.
.
thai you can't livelong enough! to
If you have any erran~s you make them all yourself. Do keep
Officers for 1987 of Harrison- and past patrons of other chapwant handled between now and smiling.
ters and Harrlslonvllle Chapter.
ville Chapter 255, Order of the
all honored Masons. those with
Eastern Star, were Installed In
ceremonies held recently at the grand appointments, and Ruby
Demo. Warranty.
Diehl,
60
Y,ear
member.
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. f,a~emyer ·and Well were
Ins\aJJed )"ere AvaneiiGeorge,
recogniz,
e d , a.~d presented gifts
worlhy matron; Dana Hoffman,
by
Clara
Mae Morris and Harold
with pic .coming In Thursday
worthy patron; Bernice Hof·
Rice.
package.
fman, associate m atron: Fred
Mrs . George announced her
Thomas M. Brown, formerly of
George, associate patron; Gra. (614) 992-6421
.
.cle Wilson, secretary; Donna them e, "This Is My Country."
Pqmeroy, cou nselor anddlreetor
Nelson, treasurer; Betty Bishop, · Rice gave the bless ing b'eforc
of guidance at Port Clinton High
Middlq" 1rt
:199 S. Third
conductress;
Kim Nelson, asso- refres hments were served "1
School, Is t)1e recipient of the 1986
OH. 45=7(,0
Ohio Association of Counseling
ciate conductress; Golda Reed, tables decorated In the Thanksglv ing mol if.
Development Merltorlus Service
chaplain; Larry Well, ma rshall;
Award.
Jane Wise, organist; Pearl Canaday, Ada; Clar a . Mae Morris,
This is one of the two top stale
awards given by OACD each
Ruth; Pauline A tklns, Esther:
year loa guidance counselor who
Neva Nicholson , Marl ha;
·
Brenda
Kennedy, EJecta; Ruth
has made a slgnflcant contribuErlewine, warder: and Norman
tion to -guidance and counseling
at the local and slate level.
Will, sentinel.
The award was presented, with
Bernice Hoffman and Dana
Hoffman were the installin g
a slide presentation featuring the
officers assisted by Noami King,
Port Clint on High School gui·
Thomas
M.
Brown
marshall; Chester King, chadance program, a t the Ohio-Ohio
Guida nce Conference' held In
high school guidance councilor plain; Wilma Styer, organist;
Columbus. Nov. 3-5.
Elsie Schoenlan, warder; Lewis
since 1973.
Brown has been emp loyed with
Schoenlan,
senllnel.
Brown, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
the Port Clin ton City Schools for Virgil V. Brown of Pomeroy, Js
Karen Facemyer and Larry
the pa~ t 20 years, serving as an current state vice-president elect Well , worthy matron and patron,
elementary principal, junior or the Ohio School Counselor presided at the meeting, Introducing Linda Davis, president of
high lguld ance counselor and Associ at ion.
District 25, grand representatives , Stella Atkins, Florida,
Helen Ferris, Nevada, worthy
Janel Bolin, member of the gift exchange party on Dec. 16 at matrons and worthy patrons of
Rutland Friendly Gardeners and
the liome of Charlene Hoeflich, other chapters, all past matrons
president of the Ohio Assoclatlon
sponsor. The annual Santa lunof Garden Clubs, gave a flower
cheon for the children of
arranging demonstration at
members was set for Dec. 6.
Tuesday night's meeting. of the
Dish clothes are being sold as a
Ohio Eta P hi Chapter, Beta
money making project. Plans
Sigma Phi Sorority, held at the were made for assisting families
home of Marty Ferguson.
at Thanksgiving and members
Holiday activ ities were noted
were reminded to lake canned
with the couple's . Christmas goos to the next meeting which
party to be held on Dec. 13 at the will be held Nov. 25 at the Senior
Senior Citizens Cent.er, and the Citizens Center.

-,.... -

PRICES·SD
77
81
81
82
83

Counselor
·honored

Pontiac Grand Prix ........... $179 5:

Buick Regal ....................... $2·19 5
Ford Escort Wagon ••••••••••• S2695.
Olds Firenza ...................... S2395;
Ply. Horizon ............ ;......... $269 5: ·

83 Ply. Horizon ...................... S3l95

84 Chevy Custom Van ........ $13,995:
85 Chevy S10......................... S499 5:
86 Lebaron GTS ................... S11,99S

COO-PER.

Chrysler•Plymourh•Dcxlge, Inc

;DO YOU LIKE

$AVING MONEY?

commission spokesman said to-

Sponsooed by - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - . . : . . , . . - -

.

Chr istmas just call on Nancy
Manley in Middleport. Nancy
already has the family tree up
and decorated so she'll have time
to give you a helpln' hand as you
try to 'get It all together.

Harrisonville OES
installs new offic?rs

CLEVELAND tUPI ) - A S&gt;
million prize awaits the holder of
one Ohio Super Lotto ticket that
lists all six numbers drawn
. Wedn es day night.
The name of the ticket holder
will be announced after the
winning llcket is validated at a
regional lottery office, a lottery

Type of Entry - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - -

Mason Chapter OES
conducts rece!lt meeting ::

·---

IN STOCK

40°/o
Off

working map. failure to use a
permiss ible ex plosives In a permissible manner and failur e to
make avail abl e and train miners
in the use of self-rescue devic-es.

Nam•----------------------------------------

November 20.. 1986

Page-9 ·

Match upcoming at Budoryu

BENCH CRAFT

and

day. The winning numbers were
6, 1&gt;. 19, 24, 28 and 36.
The lucky player will receive
Ihe winningS In 20 annual pre-lax
paymenls of $250,000.
There were 171 players who
picked five of the numbers tow in
$42&gt; each. Also, 7,588 players
selected four of !he numbers,
winning $37 apiece.
Ther e were 11.1. 70.1 tickets sold
listing 'three of the numbers.
Those tickets are worth $3 each.
Tick et sales for !he weekly
drawing tota led $4,473,488, with a
total prize payout of $5.694,546.
The jackpot for next week's
game will be at leas t S5 million.

"

, ..

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
SIJ! more ·Chester Eiowhunters
have harvested
deer during the
bow and arrow

CHAIRS, LIVING ROOM.
SUITES, TABLES, fJ(.

.,

The indictment a lso sl!id the
company failed to have al the
site

Th~sday.

Bowhunters harvest

OF ALL RECLINE

sive fumes .

mine

-·

•.

Beat of the bend

40°/o

prison term and $2&gt;.000 fine.
The 14-page Indictment · said
·the specific violation was the
failure to ventilate the area to
remove or dilute fl ammable.
explosive, noxious, and harm(ul
gases, dust, smoke, and explo-

Theme: "AN OLD FASHION CHRISTMAS"

•

- .·

SELECTED

. ON DISCONTINUED
.
WHITE '
BEDROOM' PIECES

carry a maximum on£Lyear

Tifl!l: line-up 1:30 p.m. behind old Meigs High .School:
Parade Begins at 2:00 P.M.

.. "

.

50°/o
OFF ON

50°/o

a conspiracy to violate the
regu lations establis hed by the
federal Mine Safety and Health
Adm lnistrat ion.
" The object and pu r pose of this
conspiracy wa s to opera te and
cause to be operated the WRW
Min e No. 1, which was subject to
regulalion under (federal law! ,
·in the willful violation of mandalory hcailh and safety standards
r egulat ing said mine in v iolation
of (federal law!," the indictment
said, adding- those violations
" were contr ibuting factors to the
deaths of two miner employees
on Jan. 5, 1982."
The 10 counts were for various
violations of the standards and

The Pomero.y Area Chamber of
Commerce Christmas Parade Form:
Date: S.unday, Nov. 30th

COMMENTS :

By The Bend.

,

" Which C'n lails dt ·i.l lin r.,: wit h 1111 w- 1
meeting wilh :-.chool offic i;.li s.
th(' Young.i..,fOVI'n Ed uca l ion Ns~ o·
li
fe. 1 ' _
f'O!lfir.!lli'!l-lh~L Ood&lt;L.ltas been . ci~f'ion. sa.id hr':-. slilf r~vic,hng
" M .Y student s h a\ ' C' 'i hOWil
transferred wilhin 1he dlst riel.
!he ·situalion and can Offe ti no'
hm\·
'hPY ('an chPiJI. Ji l' and "slt"al.
from East High Ia Woodrow f'urth&lt;'l' comment.
1
how
the~·
can mi stx•havc in class.
Wilson High SchooL
Th(.•.co nlrm·ers.v e&gt;ruplf'd \\ he&gt;n
. One parent who complained Dodd gave her 10Jh and pth how thO)' can fighl wit h each
about Dodd to the school board, grade F.rtglish C'las S{'S &lt;J wrii!Pn other. ho"' 1hey ca~ comr tocl.ass
Allee Parkman. said she's satl•- &lt;;ts ~ ignment that call Pd fur lht&gt;m "drunk, and how 1hey can be
fled with the teacher' s transfer. .to assess themselves in regar(l to low -down Jnd conniv ing," . the '
preface continu ed.
,
" i'm satisfied, as long as she's entering the job mqr kc.t. · ,
In
a
man'
posit
ivc
VPiii,
Dodd
not in front of my s on trying to
In a prefa ce to .the ass ignm ~nl .
,
said
the
students
have
choices
to
teach; " Parkman said. "It's up Dodd added some personal sth teto the parents atWood.rowWilson menls. say ing If she werd to make in life, and s he urged
to determine whether they, want' become president of the un1 •eo to "let the good light that Is
within you shin e for all to see. ' '
that kind of person .teachlngtheir 'Stales, her experience at the
Dodd is a first -year teacher ih
ch ildren."
school would ...tt(l"rve as
I
he
district,
Thomas Krispli, president of preparation for the Part

SAVE

30°/o
OFF .ALL

30~/o
OFF

SLEEP
.,

SOlD. OAK
KINCAID

SOFAS.

IN STOCK .

.DINING ROOM
LAY-AWAY ·
FOR

Warner, 67, l!-i charged with

ENTRY MEMBERS WILL: WALK

I

·

45 counts of will fu I misappli ca ·
lion of funds , lour cou nt s of
securities violations and one
count of theft by dccept ion.

Does Entry Include a Float! YES

•

The .Daily Sentiner-

Top employee honored at Inn

Hamilton. Ohio, were partners in

whPn shE.' was named In a

· Defense altor ney Armis ·
tr.ad Gilli am r esponded. " It' s
the fir st tim £' in my 30 yea rs of
practicin g law Iha l I' ve been
called arro;:a nl for filing a
motion."

gave studenls a wrilten· assign·
m~nt " in w~Lch. _!! he _r£ferred.Jo~
them as low-life ·and accused
them of lying, stealing and
cheating.
.
The assignm ent sparked a
protest by several parents, who
appeared at · a school board
meeting that evening and called
for her dism issal.
School district s pokesman
Chuck Zilla said Wednesday the
situation has been resolved. but
he refused to comment further .
Ohio Education Association
official Norf)l Young. who accompanied Dodd to- a retent

Two miners at the WRW Mine
No. I were killed Jan . 5, 1982.
when 1hey were overco me by
carbon monoxide fumes :
Th e indictmenl charged the
Woolums and Richardson , all of

Five pot pnt ial jurors were

he sa id.

•

LEXINGTON, K.v. iUPI) Three Ohio men were indicted on
min e safety v iolal ions which a
federal grand jury said resulted
in the' deaths of two coal miners
in Knox County in 1982.
Indicted were Noah Woolum.
William Woo lum and Roger
Richardso n. all offi cers and
directors of !he Woo lumRichardson-Woolum Corp. which
operated !he coal mine a t Bry-

disquali fl ed Wednesday after ·
answering questions from
iawyets . One woman said s he
CQns idered Warner to be
guilty. a nother woman said
she ha d already formed an
opinion on the case and the
other t hrw werr excused
because they had been Home
Stat e depositors.
The judge also issued an
order pr ohibiting the press
from publis hing the na mes of
prospect lw or seated jurors.
The ord er was Iss ued aft er a
woman who had been selected
for the jury pool beca.m e upset

Pro§_ecutor Law 1·ence Kane

20. 1

'

insurance.

complained about the late
· moilon.
''This type of st rategy is a
form of int imidal ion arid arro-

l .•

Teacher's criticism of students· ·results In transfer

CINCINNATI IUPii - The
pool of paten! ial jurors in the
tri&amp;l of former Home State
Savings Bank owner Marvin
Warner and two ex-bank preside nts has reached 12,
.
.Hamilton Counl y Co mmon
Pleas Court Judge Richard
Niehaus want s the jury pool
big enough so that 12 jurors
a.nd four alternates can sur·
vive all the chall enges of
lawyers .
Although the pool reached
12 after Wednesdav' s third
day of quesllmilng ·potential
JUrors, lawyers stiJI had !he
right to chaJienge and dismiss
up to 22 prospective ' jurors.
Questioning of potential jurors cant inued todav .
Warner, along with former
Home Sta te Presidents David
Sc hi ebel and Burton Bongard.
are accused of illega ll y funn el·
ing millions of dollars in Home
State asset s to ESM Gover nment Securities of Fort Lauderda!&lt;&gt;, Fla .
When ESM collapsed under
heavy de bt , Home State lost al
least $144 m illion. When Home
State depos itors learned of the
loss, they started a run on the
bank in March of 1981 and il
closed in a few days. That
triggered dPpos ilor pani c
throughout Oh io and Gov .'
Richard Ce les lr orde red 70
sav ings a nd loa ns clost'&lt;l unl il
the y obta ined fe d e r a l

newspaper slory Wedn esday.
The story said she had made
some di sparagi ng remarks
about her employer, who s he
sa id was relu ctant to giv£' her
time off for jury duty. The
woman told the judge her
employer had called her and
compla ined about the story.
The judge dis missed the
woman fr om the jury pool.
saying th at she had violated
court ins tructions and talked
a bout the case · with her
e mployer. Then. the judge
approved a mol ion by defense
attorneys that the names of
prospec tive jurors not be
publis hed .
Just before court was adjourned, defense law yers
sought to fil e a mot ion- Ihe
nature of w hi ch wasn 't di sclosed - and Ihe judge noled
that the daie for filing mol ions
· had passed. The judge said !he
motion co uld be filed. but
added he might nol rule on it.

,.

Ohio

Warner
trial jury
poolnaiv
up to 12

g-ance:·

t

Ohio Eta Phi chapter meets

THAT''S JUST 51.00 A WEEK

$AVE- S6.50

DECEMBER
24th
·DELIVERY
CHECK OUT THE .
ODDS &amp; ENDS
DEPARTM.NT
·FOI
UNBEUEVABLE
BAIGAINS

THE DAILY SENTINEL INVITES YOU TO
$AYE 20°/o OFF THE .REGULAR HOME
DELIVERED PRICE.
SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR 6 MONTHS FOR
ONLY S26.00

UMW group presents
Thanksgiving program

3·0°/o
OFF
ALL

DINETTES

"Clouds of Witness" was the
title of the Thanksgiving prO:
gram presented by Mrs. l\al)lcyn
Baum and Mrs. Helen Wolf at the
recent meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women. A
prelude of music was presented
by Mrs. Helen Wolf, pianist,
followed by group singing of
" America the Beautiful."
Mrs. Baum defined the purpose of the program to give
thanks for those women who
began the work and those who
continue the work of the United
Methodist Women In missions.
Scripture was .read from the 12th
chapter of Hebrews followed by
respons iv e reading of
" Thankfulness.'·
The leaders gave a brief
history of a iew women who over
the years have made significant
contributions to Christian missions. Their legacy lives on In the
lives and Institutions which are
dedicated to Christ and hts
mission, II was pointed out.
Several poems pertaining to

rl

Thanksgiving were read, along
with a prayer of Thanksgiving
followed by group singing of "0
Mas!er Let Me Walk with Thee."
Ruth Karr and Helen Wolf sang
'.'Whispering Hope" and the
program closed with group sing- .
lng of "Thank You; Lord." .
At the close of the program,
Mrs. Bernice.Bailey Installed the
officers for 1987 - Mrs. Denise
Mora, president: Mrs. Kathryn
Mora, v ice president: Mrs. Betty '
Roush. secretary; Mrs . Ethel
Orr, assistant secretary; Mrs.
Marily n Karr, treasurer: Mrs
Janel Bolln, asSistant treasurer.
Mrs. Denise Mora presided at
the meeting with 25 sick and
shu tin calls being reported. Officers' reports' were given and the
president thanked those who
helped with the election day
dinner and bazaar .
The Christmas program wm be
presented at the regular meeting
Dec. 4 with a potluck dinner at
noon. A program wUI follow and
there will be il $3 gilt exchange.

,,

•

Amanda Hays ·

Hays birthd~y
isA lasagna
celebrated
supper for Amanda
Hays was held In observance of
her six th birthday. A clown cake
and Ice cream were served and
gifts were given to lhe you~gsler .
Attending were lier parents, Jo
Ann and Randy Hays, Rutland;
and her sister, Alison, her
grandmother ·and grandfather,
Mona and Cecil Vallance, Galli·
polls, and uncle, Troy Bartley,
Vinton, and two cousins, Gina
and Andrea Rutan, Bidwell, and •
an aunt, Clotine Tingler, Flatwoods, Ky. Also attending were
Dreama. Alan and Llns!Hudson. !
Middleport.
Sending gifts were Amanda' s
grandmother artd uncle, Jan and
Mike Hays , Marie Ha and Clem
Hays, New Matamoras.

"

TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SPECIAL OFFER JUST FILL
OUT THE COUPON BELOW AND MAIL IT ALONG WITH
YOUR PAYMENT QF ONLY SJ6.00 TO:
DAILY SENTINEL
111- COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
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rvE's.l WOULD-LIKE TOTAKEAo\.;ANTAGE-OFT-HissP.EciA-LI
OFFER OF 6 MONTHS FOR ONLY

NAME
ADDRESS

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DATE

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------------------------------------------

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"YOUR HOMnOWN NEWSPAPER"
•

�~.

Page-10-.The Daily Sentinel

. 'TI1 11sday, November 20;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Contestants

Belts awarded

LOCAL PATRIOTS- Att~dlng the dedication of a marker at
GeorKe Washington's camps~e at Reno by the Marietta Chapter,
DAR, were local patriots, back !rom left, Mrs. Clyde Ingles, l\.lrs.
Alice Struble, Mrs. Kay Place, Mrs. Marilyn King, Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds, Miss Eleanor Smith, and front, Whitney Ashley, Rachel
Ashley, and Emma Ashley holding Emily Ashley.

DAR chapter makes visit
to Washington's campsite

I

I I

Several members ·of Return Waldschmidt House trustee:
Jon.a than Meigs Chapt~r. Daugh- Mrs. Alice Struble, Miss Eleanor
ters of the American Revolution. Smith, and Mrs. Emma Ashley.
attended the marking of one of Representing the Ewing C ~ap­
George Washington's campsites ter. Sons oft he American Revoluat Reno by the Marietta Chapter. tion. were Keith D. Ashley,
chapter president. The Children
DAR.
Washington surveyed and ex- of the American Revolution
plored much o r the territory Chapter were represented by
along the Ohio River includin g Rachel A. Sahley, Whitney B.
!he Kiashuta Campsite at Long Ashley, and Emily D. Ashley.
Others attending were Mrs.
Bottom. The Reno Campsite is a
part or the Marietta driving tour Kay Place. Vincent. Marietta
Chapter regent . Mrs. Marilyn
or Ohio's oldest settlement.
Attending from Return Jon a- K)ng. Ohio DAR regent. and Mrs.
than Meigs Chapter were Mrs. " Joseph Colburn, Columbus. state
Ronald Reynolds , regent: Mrs. corresponding secretary, who Is
Clyde Ingles . Ohio D.A.R of Meigs County Ancestry.

A number of students at the
Budoryu Dojo In Middleport
tes.ted for t he rank or sb ichikyu
(yellow belt!. - ·
· These st udent s had enrolled In
a ·special class meeting twice as
often and working considera bly
harder than regular classes at
the dojo. Passi'ng the t,eswtlnlo
yellow belt means that . the
Individual. student has learneq
the techniques at White belt t:i8
techniques! and can perform
them In correct seq uence ~ilh a
certain degree of proficiency.
Earning top scores on the test
were Kenny Reyolds. Mary Ash.
Brad Alexander, ·Rex Gibbs.
John Harrison, J im Powell. and
Paul Sharp. Other st udents completing the lest were Adam
Little, Jamcy Little.. Tony Six,
Jimmy Williams. Kevin Taylor,
· Tim Jones. Jim Hysell. Terry
Johnson .. Jerry Armslrong. Jan
Reuter. John Fink. Mike Jackson ·
and Harvey Hoffn er.
Th'e se · student s will not be
learning a series . Of 103 new
techniqu es including new blocks.
kicks and slrlkes. sweeps. lhrows
and take downs. one-step sparring and self de fense, free
sparr ing and kala. and ancient
weapons techniques with Ihe bo.
a long slaff.
·

Southeast Ohio Junior · Miss
' Inc., today announced the first
three contestants for the 1987
Meigs County Junior Miss SchoIars hip Prograpt to be held Nov.
JO, 3 p.m., at Mel)s Junior High ·
School Auditorium, Middleport.
.The contestants are Rob)ln Bar· ,
nett, ~my Louks and Lisa Pape.
Miss Ba~nett Is a senior at
Eastern High Schoolwhereshels ·
a · tna)orette. and active In
marching band. concert bank, .
v~lleyball, all county barid newspaper staff and lhc prom com- ·
mlttee. She has received the
. Acad~mlc All·Amerlcan Award,
as well as leadership, scholasllc
and math awards. She plans to
attend Ohio University and
pursue a career In broadcasting.
She Will perform a dance and
balon routine for the creative and

at 6:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
church was noted.
Mrs. Ted Downie had devo·
lions using the topic, "Forget Not
Ail My Benefits." The program
was given by Mrs. Wendell
Hoover. president. There were79
sick ca lls made during the
month.
Hostesses were Mrs . George
Wright . Mrs Dale Thoren. and
Mrs . Joe Clark. The program
was given by Mrs . Wendell
Hoover, presldenl.

Pageant plans announced
'

Dream World will presenr it s
1987 Ohio Preliminary Pageanl
on Dec. 28 at the Holiday Inn.
Gallipolis.
The Dream World Baby Mister
and Miss groups will begin at I
p.m. with age group 0-1 year; 13
months to 2 years; 25 months 10
three .v ears and lour and five
year olds.
The Dream WQrld Miss groups
will begin at 3 p.m. with age
groups &amp;7. 8 to IO.lllo 13. 141o 16,

and 17 to 24 years. A winner and
three runners- up in each agP
group and all winners will
advance to Ihe state pageanl. A
Dream World Grand Baby a nd
Dream World Grand Queen will
be crowned.
Information an applications
may be obtained from the sta te
director by writing to Stale
Director. Route 1, Box 155.
Barboursville. W. Va . 25504. or
by calling 304-743-9963.

Middleport Lit.e!ary.Club·
conducts recent meeting

•

· Mrs. Everett Ha yes reviewed
the book. "Footsteps" by RIchard Holmes. at t·he recent
meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held an he home of Mrs.
Roy Cassell at The Maples
complex.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, pres!·
dent , Introduced the reviewed
who noled that Holmes Is a n
English biographer trave ling
across Europe searching for
romanlle writers of the past.. In
her review, Mrs. Hayes concentrated on the passionate feminist
writer, Mary Wollstonecraft.
whom she described as an ardent
woman liberator and scholar.·
She-received her education from
various women who were her
friends and wrote "Thoughts on
the Education of Daughters" and

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"Mary." Mrs. Hayes del ailed t he
life of Mary who lived wit h lhe
Ameri can writer. Gilbert Imlay.
and told oft he birth of a daughter
and her early death.
Mrs. Wallace presided at the
meeting welcoming the
mem hers. The club collet! was
given In unison and minutes of a
previous meeting were approved .. Ciub members voted to
place Mrs. Wilson Carpep ter and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz on the
nominating committee to serve
with the Immediate past president In select lngthe new officers.
For roll call members named
an English poet. Mrs. Cassell
served candy; crackers. cheeseball and snacks. The women
were taken on a tour of the
facility by the manager.
\

"Fantasle-Impromptu Op. 66."
. Miss Pape, daughter of John
and Patty Pape, Is a senior at·
Southern High, School where s he
Miss Louks plan~ to attend
has been active In French Club,
Ohio University and pursue a
choir. student council and cheercareer as a concert pianist . The
lea~lng. She plans lo attend Rio
Eastern High School senior has
Grande College and become 0
been acl'ive In National Honor teacher.
.
Society. stqdent ·council, newsThe contestants wili compete
paper staff, and the quiz team.
In categories of youth fitnes s,
She Is a member or the concert
paise and appearance. creative
IJand, all-county band. · band · and perfqrmlng arts, as well as
council and Is a majorette. She scholastic ability and ,j udge's
has received the Who's Who In Interviews.
Music Award . .!he United States
The wlnner of the local proNational Leadership Award, the gram will compete for the title of
United Stales National Mathe- Ohio's Junior Miss . durlng state
matics Award and an award for compelltlon In Mount Vernon the
outstanding majorette. She Is the first week In February. The
daughter of Sharon and Jim · winner .t n Mount Vernon will
Louks. For her creative and represent the .s tate in the napreforming arts presentation, tiona! Junior Miss Program to be
she w.UI play on piano, 'Chopin's ., held In :June 1987 in Mobile, Ala.
.

APPE!\RING IN SERVICES Lucas
and lhe Watchmen of Operation Evangelize in
Chesapeake, Ohio, wUI hold a weekend revival at
' Gallipolis Christian Church, Friday through
Sunday. The Watchmen wUI he In concert Friday.

YELLOW BELTS - These students of lhe Burdoryu Dojo in
Middleport have completed their yellow hell ii'SI.

Community calendar / area happenings
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee is hosting a post-election
potluck dinner. Thursday, 6 p.m ..
at' the senior citizens center,
Mulberry Heights. State Rep.
Jolynn Boster and State Senalorelect Jan Michael Long will be
present . Public invlled.

next dance at the civic centerwill
be Dec. 19.

of Cod will be in revival through
Sunday. 7 p.m. nightly, with
Evangelist Marvin Hocker. Gallipolis. Public inv ited .

LONG BOTTOM - Long Bottom Unlled Methodist Church
will have revival services Friday
and Saturday at 7 p.m ., wllhRev.
Jim Stewart. evangelist. Everyone welcome.

BAS HAN -Red Brush
Church or Christ will have
special weekend services
Saturday. 7 p .m .. and ·Sunday,
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. , with Denver
Hall of Foster. W.Va. Everyone
welcome.

PORTLAND - Hazel Community Church. Rt. 124 between
Portland and Long Bottom. will
be i n revival Friday through
Sunday with services at 7: 30each
evening. Speaker Homer Stevens. Special singing. Public
lnvlled.

CHESTER - Special meet ing
of Shade River Lodge No. 453.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m ., work In
E .A. degree.
RUTLAND - Th e annual
turkey supper sponsored by the
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department will be held Thursday
beginning al 5 p.m. in the grade
school auditorium. Tickets can
be purchased at Millerl's Store,
Rutland Department Store, G&amp;J
Auto Parts or from any fireman.
Admission Is $4 for adults and $3
for children. •

EAGLE RIDGE Eagle
Ridge Community Church will
hav e its annual Thanksgiving
dinner Sunday, 1 p.m. Everyone

RUTLAND - The Rutland
American Legion will hold a
dan ce from 8 p.m. to midnight
Salurday at the post home;
reservation for Ihe New Year' s
dance to be held on Dec. 31 may
be 'made now by calling 9921-7442.
thursday sentinel

SYRACUSE - The Sisson
Family · will present sacred
music during the Sunday morning. 10:JO a.m . worship hour
Syracuse NazareneChurch. Everyone welcome.

CRAFI' WORKSHOP- Ornaments filled with
Tuesday. Here Oliveri demonstrates the secrets
pol pourrl, raw wool,angels, and ..,cor alive bean
of making attractive bows lor the ornaments. The
c'Ontainers were ma~e during a ci'aft workshop . workshops we1e among several holiday activities
c'Onducted by Cindy Oliver~ Meigs County · being sponsored by the Extension Service.
Extension Office al craft workshops held

POMEROY
Evangeline
Chapt er 172. Order of the Eaastern Sta r. Wil l have a practice for
the officers at 3 p.m on Sunday.
Nov. 23. a nd at 4 p.m. on Sunday,
Nov. JO.

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WELCQME NEW

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Plans for particialing In the
Chrlstmasparade In Pomeroy
on Nov. 30 were made when
theMothersofTwlnsCiubmet
Monday night at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
A bake sale will be held at
Krogers from 10 a.m to 2 p.m.
a nd. the family. Christmas

party will

be held Dec. 14.

Attending the meeting were
Fonda Thomas, Shade; Gall
Patrick, Gallipolis; Shelly
Smith. Ashton, W. Va .; Deb!
- Gilmore, Middleport ; Eloise
Drenner, Cindy Aelker. Sandi
Mitch, Janet Eblin. arid Linda

~ ~

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WILKESVILLE BRANCH BANK

•'&lt;•

Philippine Islands, talked on his
appreciation of freedom . and
expressed his concern for )lis
people and their hunger for
freedom.
'
Carol Tannehill was hostess for
the meeting with Jane Walton
presiding at the meeting. Others
.

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---,.._,s- '"&lt;.'
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CumntA.P,R.

PRIME PUIS 1%
GUARANTEED

.-~

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-

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M

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IDR 90 DAYS.*

This SIIP£r ml£ is xuamnlied on a Omtm Li•w
of Crr.dzt" lllimR cqui(y IMnfar 90 days un«
)Vu', approved. Then you pay on(y the incredibly li&gt;w mte shown beliiw:

attending were Velma Rue, Rev a
Vaughan. Cla rice Krautt er,
Ter.esa Swa tzel. Maidie Mora .
Ruby Baer. Ann Rupe. Norman
Custer. and Joan Corder. It was
announced that the Ohio convention will be held May 15-17 al
Toledo.
'

If yoorCentraLine
of Credit is

$50, 000 a&gt;lli up
$25,000 - $49.999
$ 5,000 . $24.999

.},
'i .·• ·&lt;}. •

.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will hold a
regular meeting at 7:30 thi s
evening. An oyster supper will be
served following the business
sess ion.

."

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'\

:

The Rev. ·S. Zuniga, pastor of
:'t he Middleport Heath United
~et hodlst Church. talked on
~:freedom at, the recent. meeting of
!the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
~f Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. held
:'a t Ihe Episcopal Parish House.
"' The mlnlsler, a native or the

•

!

{

Faulk, all of Pomeroy: Mrs.
Eblin and Mrs. Aeiket served
refreshments.
Anyone interested in joining
the club from Athens , Callla ,
Mason and Meigs County is
asked to contact Mrs. Faulk.
992-2475 or Mrs. Thomas. 9922753.
.

.
"
.tfreceptor Beta Beta chapter meets

CUSTOMERS AT -OUR

--·
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..-,
-...
••
-.-·
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Mothers of Twins club .holds meeting

:f.

POMEROY - . Memllers of
Pomeroy Chapter 186. Order or
lhe Eastern Star. are 10 meet
Thursday at the Pomeroy Ma sonic Temple Ia clean the hall in
preparation for Installation of
officers which will lake place on
Nov . 24 at 7: 30 p.m.

,r

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Dan Hayman
and lhe Country Hymntimers
will be featured at . Sunday
morning9: 30 a .m. services at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene. Everyone welcome.

"

ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs f\etler Health Club will
meet Thursday, 1:15 p.m .. at the
home of Phyllis Skinner.

and wUI sing before Saturday and Sundar
preaching. Services wUI be]'riday and Saturd,ay;
7 p.m., Sunday morning Hl: 30 a.m. and Sunda)
evenin~ at 6 p.m. Nursery is provided. For
·information, contacl Denny Cohurn, miriiHte~,
446-11!63 or 446-73!R.

welcome.
RUTLAND - Mr. Cartoon of
WSAZ-TV will be at the Rutland
Civic Center at 2 p.m. Saturday;
Admission Is S3 and proceeds go
to the center organization.

SATURDAY
Revival.
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Church of Christ in
Christia n Union with different
speakers each e~ning. Services
will start at 7: :l!f each evening
and will run through Nov. 23.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Child Conservation League will
meet Thursday, 7: JO p.m ., at the
Ohio Power building. Speaker
will be from Carlclon School.

Holiday plans were made when
the United Methodist Women of
the · Pomeroy Church met re cently in the church social room.
The party will be held at 6: JO
p.m. on Dec. 9. There will be a
gift cxc~ange and a donal ion for
the Christ ma s county project .
Thank offering boxes for the year
were presented wilh the money
to go to the day care center In
Ci ncinna ti. An invitation 10 at tend the carry-in dinner for lhc
Meigs Counly Council on Dec. 8

performing category of the competition, She Is the daughter of
Ron and Carol Barnett.

'

POMEROY- Cub Scout Pack
249 wUI meet Thursday, 7: JO
p.m .. at Pomeroy Church or
Christ. Boys are reminded 10
bring art work for show.

UMW conducts meeting

r pageant

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RUTLAND -Rutland Church

MARKED - George Washington's campsite at Reno was
marked recently by Marietta Chapter, DAR.

·.

'-···-

'

Your Secured Rare"'' is
Prime+ 1%
Prime + l'l:t%
Primt + 2%

AlUI, you r11n pay back as little each numth as
tlw interr.st due 1111 your oulstnoulin/i bali! nee.
FOr compltte financial flexihil ity

·~

·Tize inliimsl clzol'f}'.&lt; on .'ii!Curr.d U!ntmLirws 1nay /xi lnx deductihk-.
Tlu: new tnx li&gt;w a/lnwsfor dcductimz o/.'ifnne or all of1/w iniRrrst
rm Jomrs Sl.nor.d by a jX!r.iona! residenrf'.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - A bake sal e will
be held in I he lobby of Veterans
Memorial Hospital Friday startIng at 10 a.m. by the Women's
Auxiliary. Next meeting will be
hel d at 1: JO p.m on Tuesday at
lhe hospital.

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t--- -- - --: :·:~·.. ::::::·.. "'~

.

""'~''"' """'&lt;1""'\'l

.

lfn1 can=&gt;"'!' line ofC1T!fiit!Jv

writiltJ.! a s{Jetwl G:'1llmli•w check.

Holiday train
schedule set
NELSONVILLE - The HockIng Valley Scenic Railway has
announced !I s a nnual "Santa
Claus" train ride.
Special l'"lns will feature
old-time heated passenger cars
that are • glowl~g wllh the holiday
. spirit· ,and pull ed by a restored
1916 steam locomotive regardless of weather co nditions.
Trains depart from a turn-of-th ecent ury railway station decorated for the holiday season.
Schedules are weekends at noon
and 2 p.m . on Dec. 6 and 7, 13 and
l4 and 20 and 21.
· During the train ride, passengers are kept. warm and will
be treated to a s~lal narration
. of Christmas poems . stories and
music to makethetrtpenjoyable.
There will be a treat for the
c hildren and a visit from
' "Santa" himself.
Each ride Is limited. Make
your reservations early. Details
can be obtained by phoning
(between the hours oflOa.m. and
4:JO p.m .) 513-335-0382 or by
wrlllng: Hocking Valley Scenic
Railway , Santa Claus Trains,
P.O. Box 427, Nelsonville. OH
45764.

•

A Qzld Mnste~Ozrr/ is inc/culed jnr cast·

Friendly Staff

.. 'tJu pay no rWIIfJaJSis or applimlion fee
ifyou act /Jcf()lf) )Jn1111ry 3L A savmgs of
upto$200.

Quick Loan Approval
bac~. Advanced tlck.ets at a reduced price are for
•sale at several buslne.s -houses in Rutland,
, Pomeroy and Middleport. The musical is the first
produced by the Big Bend Minstrel Association
since 1981.

Longer Hours
OPEN~ 8~5 M-T·lh.·fri ..... Satvrday 8-Noon

Open Wednesday, Nov1111~r 26th 8 AM to 5 PM. Closed T"onksgiving

THE VINTON COUNTY
T7
NATIONAL
y
-BANK
Wilkesville 669-4651 .

,.

FDIC

•

CI

"

It Is assured continuity of outstanding leadership that will
certainly carry It to·even greater ..
success," flaas said ll'ednesdav.
The Boston Symphony conducted a lengthy search for a
managing director afler redefln-'
lng . the chief adrilln~tratlve
position following the January
resignation of General Manager
ThOtljas W. Morris.

'

352 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.
· Phone 446-0902 ·

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The Bank That Maks Things Happen.

~

lng attendance at Severance Hall
and the outdoor Blossom Music
Center.
Haas Is to join the Boston
Symphony In Ma~ch.
"The Cleveland Orchestra has
an unquestioned International
reputation for artistic excellence. and with Christoph von
Dohnanyl's (music d,l rector's)
cqntract extended through 1993,

coasl-lo-coast.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

brchestra official goes to Boston _
" CLEVELAND jUPII - The
.Boston Symphony Orchestra has
~ame&lt;j Kenneth Haas, general
fvlanager of !he Cleveland Orll;hestra. · Its new managing
'!!!rector.
·
; Haas Joined the Cleveland
ilrchestra in 1970. and became Its
:Beneral manager In 1976.,Durlng
;;l)ls tenure In Cleveland the
~rchestra enjoyed record· break-

· mtl Ohi11. Kt•ntw~:\: ~11dimw mtd W r,"if
ViY).~ni;z mtd 15 000 CIRRUS mar lzm,,

Th find out more about CentraLine of Credit, visit any one of our convenient
branch offices. Or give us a call. But do it today. If you get yo~ aJ?plicatipn in now,
you may S?&lt;Jn be enjoying the best way to bOrroW money armmd. More or less.
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The a~uiml fee is on{v $.30. A•lli

fzdyrmml is defemxi until )&lt;Ill u.&lt;c
ymr U!ntmLine 11· C1f!dit.
;·

IICteSS In your Gi•ntmLine nf Crrdit. u.:;,
if for mnjor purrii(ISf!S, or il1 {!el cash al
any Centro! 'lh1sl oJ)Ia•orat fJll('r 5(}()
Owl autumn/('(/ ftf/111' 1,11.(1Cirines JhmtrJ!fi.

...

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Middleport, OH.
Phone 992 -6661 .

• 'Ibur CentrqLine must be a'pproued by ]amwry 31, 1987/n qualify for the90-day mte gummllcr.
••Theannua/perte.ntage mte may vary due to fluc tuations m Prime Primerate refers to the tltr ll ofli rrrnt Prime rat. ,, '' '
•The Centm/7Tust Cqmpany. The mtesforan unsecu,.d CentmLineojCre,dct arr.. $5,000-$24.999. Pre me plu&lt; 3oh. :·.
$25,000$49.999, Prime plus 2 1/2%; $50.000 and up, Pn me plus 2%

,.

Affil~~- T~ C..tml ~..lie&gt;!.

Ci""KMii, Ohin

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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel ·
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Thursday, November 20, 1~86 ',

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. . AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - Corpo.. rate life after a takei&gt;vermay 'not
" lie all that corporate raider
James Goldsmith would have
American l&lt;&gt;aders .believe.
" : Goldsmith, . a British-French
ind~strlallst who · Is planning a
hostile takeover of Goodyear
Tin1' &amp; Rubber Co., told a
congress lonal subcommittee
Tuesday In Washington that his
· 1981 raid on Diamond lnterna·
tiona! brought success to Ohio
Diamond subsidiaries that were
sold.
t
Officials of some of those
subsidiar ies, however said
• qoidsm lln had elfaggerat~ t lie!r
·.. successes. or Ignored . their
losses.
Goldsmith told thesubcommll·
tee that U.S. Playing Card Co rp.

In Norwood "now employs abou·t fairly recent acquisition of
25 percent niore people" since II
Fournier of Spain, . which has
was sold In late 1982 to an
about 500 ~mployees there.
Investor group.
Officials of Heekln Can fnc. of
, The same day a~ the hearing,
Cincinnati said that while that
the company announced· It was company's sale probably did not
laying off abou tlOO workers at Its hurl Its stature. !i probalily did
suburban Cincinnati plant.
not help, eitHer, despite GoldsRonald Rule, U.S. · Playing mith's claims.
Card's president, said the com·
" We were a good division of
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publlsblng CO.
pan~ may be better off than if It
Diamond and we continue to do
farm,
featured
by
the
Meigs
SoU
and
Water
Leave
your name, address and telepmne ,.."'ber •
had remained a Diamond subs!· .very well," John Haas, the .
Conservation
District,
Is
located
somewhere
in
1\'ith
your
card or letter. No telephone caDs wU! be ' •
diary , but it is not as prosperous company's president, · said. "It
Meigs
County.
Individuals
wishing
to
participate
ac&lt;epted.
All contest entries should be turned In to ,.
as Goldsmlth claimed. The coun· just doesn't make much differthe
newspaper
office by .4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In
th~
weekly
contest
may
do
so
by
guessing
ihe
try's largest playing .card manu· ence what envlr.onment we are
farm's
owner.
Just
mall,
or
drop
off
your
guess
to
In
case
of
a
tie,
the winner will be chosm by
facturer has been losing ground in."
the
the
Dally
Sentinel,
111
Court
St.,
Pomeroy,
loitery.
Next
w,eilk,
a Gall! a County farm will he
to foreign competition, he said.
Goldsmlt b told the su brommlt.
Ohio,
45769,
or
the
Gallipolis
Trl~une,
825
Third
lealured by the Gallla Soli and Water COII!ervaU.S. Playing Card's sales sln~e tee that since Heekln Can was
Ave
..
Gallipolis,
Ohio,
45631
,
an~
you
may
win
aS5
lion District.
It s separation from , Diamond acquired by an Investor group In
International have been "rather • la,te 1982. Its sales hiwe alniosl_
flat," he said, and total employ- doubled, Its operating Income
' ' ,
ment increased only through the ftas Increased to $25 million from
$10 m!lllon and employment has
·risen by 20 pe~cent..
costs; William Ritchie, ReedsHaas estimated employment
Forty-five cases were pro- Ky .. $'!9 and costs; Paul Beegle,
ville. drug abuse, 30 days In jail
growth has ·been less than 1 cessed before Juqge Patrick Racine, $20 and costs; Michael
suspended. six months proba·
percent during that time period. O'Brien In the Meigs County Cox, Cuslturton, $22 and costs;
Operating Income Increased Court Wednesday.
James W. Pickens, Racine. $25 t ion. $100 and costs: Wayne
from about $19.9 million to $24.2
and costs: David E. Atkinson. Cleland. Rutland. domestic violence. six months In jail susmillion In 1983, the company's
Eleven defendant s forfeited . Little Hocking, $26 and costs;
· · By United Press International
ments were blamed for two first full year apart from Dla· bonds and Include Harry Reger, David J. Hartley, New Marsh· pended; . six months probapon,
A storm tha t dumped up to 10 deaths each in Michi gan and New mond International.
Duncan Falls, $50; Freddie field, $20 and costs: Christopher refrain ·from complainant and
· tnches of snow In the Midwest York, three In Massachusetts
costs; Christopher Gundlach;
Sales have Increased about 67 · S.t~rcher, Fairmont. $70; Dou- George, Waverly, $29 and costs;
headed today for the Northeast, an d one each in South Dakota and percent to $250 million this year glasClellan, Pomeroy, $50; Cha· PennyL.Pe.rry,;Jackson:$22and Hunt !ngton, no driver's license,
, where residents cleared up to 20 Kansas.
from $150 million in 1982. but rles Schwartz, Plttsbuqih. $50: · cos ts; Calvm E. Carlim, Hum· $50 and costs, renew license In
.inches of snow from storms that
The lates t dea th came Wednes- have not doubled, Haas said.
seven days; Norman Best, CheJoseph Drummond Gallipolis cane, W.Va .. $20 and costs;
.. ·.'killed 10 people and left nearly day night In Pope Park In
sapeake,
failure to yield, $10 and
Heekln Can almost was sold to $50; Raymond Bu~deti e, Par: Brenda K White. Racine. $20.and
300,000 c~stomers in the dark.
Hartford, Conn.. where a home- a different container manufac· kersburg, $50; Bernard Nlehm costs: Ttmot hy W. Stephens, costs; Lawrence Babb!t, Racine..
The latest storm had dropped less person was burned In a flreln turer, which uodoubtedly would Jr., Ga!llp()lls. $ ; Kermit West· Belpre. $20 and costs; Dianna failure to display sticker. $25 and·
: .10 inches of s now on Wa verly, a mak esh ift s heller from the have meant layoffs and con soli· cot t. zanesvllie. 45
costs: Kevin Thomas, Rutland.·
$50. all posted on Lee. Mason, $20 and , costs;
·Iowa. and five Inc hes on Green cold.
dation, Haas said:
speeding charges; Lisa D. Smith. Charles Balles, Cross Lanes, driving while Intoxicated, $250·
~ay. Wis.- . by early today as it
Snow, wind and lightning
"If that would have been the Racine $4 5 failure to stop· Jon w.Va.. $25 and costs; Harry and costs, three days In jail and'
· swept across the upper Mlssls· knocked out power to nearly case, I could have given you a Clark, Colu~bus.
$4 5, foll~wlng Holderby, Ga ili~olil!· $24. and 60day license suspension; speed-:
· sippi Valley.
300,000 customers In Massachu· real horror story then," he said. 100 closely· Alan Lerch Rush· costs; Oscar Bast tam. Gail!polis. ing, $50 and costs; Carl D.
Rain. sleet and snow lashed sells. nort h-central Pennsy lvaInstead, Heekln's managers v!lie, sea t~ll violation. ·
$20 and costs, $15 of fine Hughes, Pomeroy, no operator's'
northeastern Iowa- which was ' nia, Connecticut. the District of made a leveraged buyout of the
suspended.
license, $75 and costs, 30 days In'
hit ea rlier in the week with Columbia, New York and Rhode company, wlt,h the firm's assets
Others cases heard included
jail, 25 days suspended and. one'
ninelnches of snow -and coated Island, Including the Statehouse used as collateral. . Minorit y
Fined· on speeding charges Frank W. Houser, Rutland, drlv· year probation; Robert Richard,•
highways with a slippery glaze in Prov idence.
stockholder Wesray Holdings
were DavldL.Brown,Belpre, $21 ing while Intoxicated. $300 and Long Bottom, disorderly con·'
tate Wednesday.
Connectlcul Gov. William A. Inc. provided financing and the
and costs; Charles E. Buskirk. cos ts. six months In jail and 180 duct. $100 and costs, $50 sus- •
"There's lots of cars off the O'Neill orderect the . National company made Its first public Parkersburg, $21 and costs: day license suspension with all pended , .six months probation,
_road ... but nothing serious," said Guard to open seven armories to offer.lng In mld-1985.
Amos E. Hundley, Columbus, $21 but 37 days of jail s uspended, two refrain from complainant; Tony,
an Iowa highway patrol dis· provide overnight sheller• for
and costs; Jeffery L. Roush. years probation: failure to yield. R. Imboden , Racine. no opera·:
patcher in Cedar Falls.
some of the 61.000 customers still
Norfolk. Va.. $20 and costs: ·cos ts ·oniy; Ron ald Haught. Ra· tor's license, $50 and costs, fin e·
Randal D. Justice, Dry Ridge, cine, receiving stolen property. suspnded !!Ohio ilcenseobta!ned.
·. Travelefs ad visories were without electricity late Wednessix months In jail and restitution in lh&gt;ee weeks, five days In jail'
posted today across Wisconsin, day due to power failures .
Officials
reported
more
than
150
and costs: all but six days or jail suspended; criminal trespass,
.. nort hern Illinois. nort heastern
Lottie M. Bradford
people
at
Hartford-area
shellers
sent ence suspended; Ron Po- six months probation, $50 and
·: fpwa, central and southern Min·
early today.
well. Pomeroy, disorderly con- cos ts. 60 days in jail, suspended, ·
nesota and upper Michigan.
Lottie M. Bradford, 90. Ra cine, Veterans Memorial
du
ct. six months probat ion and six months probation.
· The storm was expected to
died Wednesday at Veterans
: ~each the Northeas t today, co m'•
Admissions - Linda Cozart,
INDIANAPOLIS I UP II - An Memorial Hospital.
• ing on the heels oft he snowstorm
additional chall enge has been
Mrs. Bradford was born July Porn eroy; Robert Morr is, P om e- rp;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~
. Wednesday that snarled traffi c.
filed to the proposed merger of 21, 1896, at Long Bottom, a 'roy; Kathy Chapman. Pomeroy ; II
briefly shut down Boston's Logan
c
f daughter of the late Clarence and Cecil Smith; Pomeroy.
.. International Airport and left 10 t~e American Fletcher 9rp.
KatteCartlsRose. Mrs. Bradford ·
Discharges - Lawrence Scar·
Indi anapolis Into Bane One of
:. people dead.
Columbus, Ohio.
. was a member of the Bethany berry, John- Hayes. David Tie·
: : The latest storm's impact was
meyer, Gladys Walburn.
The chall enge comes from the United Methodist Church.
·· expected to be In the form of rain
.Surviving are four sons and
Indianapolis Reinvestment AI·
across much of the Northeast,
: where record low temperatures ll ance in the form of a petition daughters-In-law, Clarence a nd rr==========~
Were reached today In Albany flied with the Federal Reserve Ruth Bradford: Gall and Mary
.and Binghamton, N.Y., with System asking for a delay In Bradforq, ail of Racine: Brian
approval of the merger.
and Donna Bradford. Wooster:
readings of 12 degrees.
Paul and Fran Bradford of
The earlier wintry bl as t was
Last month. a Columbus group Athens: another son, Curtis of
blamed fo r 10 deaths this week,
called t he Malnstreet Business Arlington. Ohio, and several
most from traffic accidents on Association filed a similar nieces and nephews. Ten grand·
icy roads. Snow and slick pavepetition.
children and eight grandchildren
ER
also survive.
BEEF SALE
Besides her parents. Mrs.
Forequarters
............. 11.19 tb.
Bradford was preceded In death
Hindquarters .............. 11.59 tb.
by her husband, Otto Bradford.
~~-.: ---Whole
Sides ............. 11.29tb.
In 1974. and by two 'brothers,
Whole New
Melv In and Reid Rose.
York Strips.. ... .......... l2.99tb.
Services wUI be held at 1 p.m.
CUT &amp;WRAPPED FREE
Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
(Allow 3 to 5 Days)
Wednesday .
Home with Rev. Paul McGuire
'
+- Rutland at3:25a .m. toOhio143forJa sonandJeremyEstepto
official In g. Bur ial will be In the
BIG BEND FO.ODLAND
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 11:27 a.m. to Union Avenue
Bethlehem Baptist Cemetery.
992-2891
for Robert Morris to Ve terans Memorial Hospital ; Tuppers
,Friends may call at the funeral
Dept.
Plains at 4:04 p.m. to Ohio 7 for Audrey Frazier to
home from 2·4 and 7·9 p.m.
992;5627
Camden-Clark Met:norial Hospital: Pomeroy F ire Department
Friday.
alerted at 10:·40 p.m. to a false alarm at the Meigs County

County court .processes 45 case.s ·

Winter stonn causes
.:outages in midwest

I Area deat.hs

November 20, 1986

J

By WILLIAM M. REILLY
NEW YORK WP!) - The
·racketeer lng conv lctlons oft hree
crime family bosses and five
henchmen for running a national
"commission" ol La Cos·a Nostra
prove for the first time that the
Mafia and its ruling council exist
and show both "can be crushed,"
officials say.
After a 10-week trial, the eight
were found guilty Wednesday of
participating In a board of
directors that has kept crime
organized in Amerlci,l since 1931.
in thiS case by sanctioning a mob
rubout, loan5harklng and union
domination.
· The eight, Including bosses of
New York's Genovese. Lucchese
and Colombo families, could be
sentenced to a total of 1.916 years
in prison, wit~ seven facing
terms of more than 300 years
each. Sentenchrg was set for Jan.

6.
Officials. saying they had
created a Mafia "power vacuum," hailed the federal convic·
tlons as the most successful
attack yet in a war on the mob
that also has sent crime bosses in
Chicago, •Boston and other cities
'
to jail,
"The verdict reached today
has resulted in dismantling the
ruling· council of La Cos a NosIra," said U.S. Attorney Rudolph
Giuliani.
"I think that It Is realistic to
think that the Mafia can be
crushed If we continue to make
these cases. We have have now
proven In a court o!law that there
Is a Mafia and that It Is run by a
commission."
·
FBI Director William Webster
added: "Tradit lonal organized
crime Is never going lo be the

same again.''

.

After the '&lt;erdlct, the jurors,
whose names were kept secret
for fear of reprisals , were led out
'by a back stairway, put In a van

FOR
CHRISTMAS
(h~fu~;· h~~=~y-1

It Rays
To Advertise

OFF
..
•'

ALL
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

SUNGLASSES
VILLAGE PHARMACY
· MIDDLEPORT, OliO

"Even in jail, nothing stops,"
Owen said "We've heard the
defendants make ugly statements about otber people's lives
and their health."
Among !bose sent to prison

were:

· -Anthony ','Fat Tony" Salerno. 75, the Genovese boss who
authorities have called the na·
lion's most powerful gangster.
He faces :los years In jaiL
-Carmine "Junior" Peh!co,
53, also known as "The Snake."
the Colombo family leader who
was sentenced Monday· to 39
years in prison on racketeering,
extortion and bribery charges
and now faces another 306 years
In jail:
.
-Anthony "Tony Ducks" Co·
railo, 73, the Lucchese boss, who
faces 326 years.
Attorney. Anthony Cardinale,
.who represented Salerno, said,
"We've just been steamrolled. I
can't believe they took six days to
reach a declslo.n such as this, If
the proof was so overwhelming."
· Another de.fense lawyer said.
" It's Mafia hysteria. The jury
went In with the Impression
about the Mafia and II colored
everything."
The "commission" of La Cosa ·
Nostra Is believed to have been
established In 1931 by Charles
" Lucky" · Luciano and other
crime bosses to settle disputes
following AI·Capone's conviction
for tax evasion.
William. Doran, In charge of
FBI operations In New York, said
the convictions had created a
"power vacuum" that likely
would result In a " power

_. Wood • Paper

The others convicted Wednesday were:
-Gennaro "Ger,ry Lang" Lan·
gella. 47, underboss in the Colombo family who Monpay was
sentenced to 65 years In jallln the
Persico trial and now faces
another 306 years.
1
-c;hrlstoper "Christie Tick"
Furnari, 62, counsel for the
Lucchese family. who faces 306
years.
· -Salva tore "'tom Mix" Santoro, 70, an underboss In the
Lucchese family who faces 326
years.
·
-'- Ralph Scopo, 57, ;/soldier In
the Colombo family and former ·
pres ident of the concrete'
workers union who faces 306
years.
-Anthony "Bruno" Indell·
cato, 30, a Bonnano family
soldier, convicted of the 1979
murder of Bonnano leader Car·
mine Galante, who faces 40years
In jail.

Plastic -Truck
Silk Screenin&amp;
Boat Lettering- Realty
Jackets · T·shirts . .
JEllY'S
SIGN' SERVICE
992-7460
SIGNS Of All KINDS
' Rl. 7

JERRY
SIEGFREID

The caseorglnally Included the
bosses of New York's other two
crime families when the Indict·
ments were announced In 1985.
Reputed Bonnano leader
Phlllp "Rusty" Rastelli, 68, was
severed from the case because he
faced other charges. He was
convicted in October for racketeering In connection with Teamsters Local 814 and the moving
and storage Industry.

Clfted,

lost in Gold HIGIII!Ir!~: .A.n·
swer to name of Willie.
PH . 992· 7406 or

8

late of Te••• Road,

Pomeroy. Ohio 46789.
Robert f . Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Neuelroed. Clerk

i11i 20, 27; (12j 4 , 31C

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124, r-otMroy Ohio

.AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Also Trattlllsslot
PH. 992-5682
or 992·71~1

's REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Servke
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

Nov. 23, 1986; Sun. Afternoon 1 P.M.

Lonted at Rutland, Ohio in Rutland American
Lecion Bide. on Beech Grove Rd. Witch for sian
on Rt. 124.
First quality line of Ch1istmas items. 3'1arce
truckloads. Men's &amp; women's Christmas items
of all kinds to choose. from. Shop the easy way
-(you get more for less). ·

Trull•. il IVIiiMIIe forpub -

64 Misc. ""erchandise

-SIG:G'Ifr ~:~~~
REGISTER BETWEEN
. 5 AND 8 P.M.

NOYEMIEI 14th WINNER
CAIOLYN BA~HNER
•FREE GIFT· WRAPPING•
•COFFEE &amp; COOKIES•

!

!
_J

MIDDLEPORT BOOK
STORE

·® C!~H~~
AUTO

24 Hour Wrecker Service
• Full Sorvko &amp; hpoir
35109 Titus load
llddltport, Ohio

Ph. 742·2592 .

All Christmas Decorations

Be Sure to Register for ·our
Friday Holiday 81ft'
Between S &amp;8 PM
Your Visa, MasterCard &amp; Layaways W~l•om ed

ON THE "T"IN MIDDLEPORT

ON THE

"T" IN

MIDDLEPORT

' Middleport Book Store
83 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPOI!T

Truck, outo. 8c
heavy equipment
repairs ond welding.
(All makos &amp; modcolol.

PH. 949-2893
or 949·2756
John I. Ientz
Owner/Medtanic

' 11·19-16-1 mo.

OLD

HEATING

CO~
. 701 2nd AYI.
.Gtilipolil, Ohio

CALL 614·992-2104

All Bible Covers .~ •• 20°/o OFF
Watch our Ads for information on our
uptomhig Gold Sale.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Apply at Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 V2 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'

PH. 992-9949

•
64 Mi.sc. Merchandise

..

64 Misc. Merchandise

9PEN DAti Y9 AM·S I'M
10/13/11/ lio

J&amp;L .BLOWN
INSIIATION
VINYL&amp;
AWMINUM SIDING

•lnsul ation
•Storm Doors ·

·. ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

''f•l ESIIMA11S"

JAMES
PH. "~::~rn

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

y,, ''"''ill N.U1

PWS: Ofltco lupplios &amp;
Furnltun, Wtdtlilg

ond Groduation

Signs, Ro or Stompt,
·lulinnt forms,

:

ONLY

2'5(

EACH

CAN. PURCHASED DAlY AT Til
DAILY1ENI'INEL TIL 3 P.M.
' I

f( hok.e. 12 gu.ge shotguna.
No hunting or treapauing,
Mynes Farm loclled Chestnut

Ridge·Ro.t.
S8flta for hire, Eveninp,SIItaod
Sundava. 304·173·5892.

4

Giveaway

JACK'S SEPTIC
TANK SERVICE

FemlleGreat Daneio.givuway,
good with llidl. Ph: 814· 256·
1613 .
.

Pomeroy, .Ohio

1 Female kitten ·to 1 good home
Ph. 814-448 -963.6.

24 Hflt iR SERVIn:

"14/992-7119
W. VA. Residents

Call

Callttt

11·4·86·1 mo.

BOGGS

!CUI QUI FOR FUlUIE Ull)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILI£, OHIO
Authorited John Deert,
New Holland, lush Hog
Form Equipmtnt
lltaltr

985-3561 ,

All Ma•u

•WHher• •Diahwashars
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

FarM Equlp111ut
Parta &amp;Servlee

PARTS' and

1-3-'86 tic

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

LIMESTONE
HAULED

•All Types

of

Excavating
•Landscaping
•Basements

TROMM
EXCAVATING
742-2328

•Sewage Systems

•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

. Call: 742-2407

11 -7·86·1 mo .

10/27/ 86/1 mo.

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUWNUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
, INSULAllON

.We can repair and retcore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes luill
"Free Estimates"

PAT HILL FORD

r-------.,

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1·13-tfc

I 2 Gaugo IMI!JIIII Only

10·1-tfn

lilt No

FUU YREMOTE &amp; INST Ali(D

,,

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
Factory Chalet

No Sunday Calls

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER

lallhan Building

6:30P.M.

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

·

9 wk. old puppiel half beegle. 2
lemaht~left c lll 614-387-0185
that 4p.m.
Maglll"inn to give ewev Ph.
814-446 -8329.

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPETMiddloport,
OUTLET
OH.

Hobson ld.

PH. 992-11173

FREE HEARiNG TESlS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co1111uterized HtBrilll Air Selection
z Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
-z
u:

~

2: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

(614) 446-1619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
B· ll tfn

In Syraeuse, Ohio
"YES. WE All OPEN."

THUIIS.·FRI.·SA T.
9 to 5

L1pwg F, C61ist'"'

BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
Middleport, Ohio

317 N. Second

~EMENT HORSES .
OEERS, RABBITS . DOGS .

COMWRCIAL • ~SIDENTIAL
, -FREE ESTIMAli:S-

CATS . EAOLES, VIRGIN
MARY, WHITE ANGelS

ALSO LARGe BIRD lATHS

IIIASONAill RAllS
IO·ltl-'16·1 1110 .

DEN~Y

CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

To 1 good home. 21itl'r 1r1ined
kittens . can 814-992-7382.
Part Beag le pups. EKC:etiM1t with
children. Call 614· 992-37~7 .

3 puppies to give away. Call
614 -992-3287 or 614-9922496.
Free to good home. S mo nth old
Collie. Good watch dog. good
with kids. Call614-985-3931 or
614-985-3839 .

4 puppies. 3 m•nnd 1 lem .. e.
Mi•ed Beagle. Call 614·742' 3 14:1.
Half Snauzer dog , bllldl and
white. phone 304-458-1517.

6 Lost' and Found
Found a palr of lldi• gloves
around Holrer Medictl Cen1er.
Ph . 614-446 ·2222 .
Lost Vz Irish Setter. 'II Cocklll'
brown,
Spaniel. 2'/J ft .
answen to Bridgef. in lftt of
Raccoon rd . a. Sho111tring Rldgt
Rd., · REWARD Ph 814-"8·
3780 or 614-UI ·3077
for
Elaine Mumpower.

..n.

••II

lost female walk• coonhoond.
white wilh btiiCk 6 brown lpotL
lasl IIUK\ on G1rneJ Ford Rd .
Ha1 a coll•· on with 1.0 . 'Ph .

614-245·9578 or 814-245·
5404.

------------~-lo~t In Eno vicin+tv tlong hlired '
Chi Hua Hua. male bi8Ck w+th 1
while ch
tns'Ntra to Chico,
weights appr . 51bt.. milling
since 1 1· 18 ·86. REWARD Ph .
tU-280-9832

•t.

Mining trom lo,.g St. in Rutland
since Nov. 21 n . GriV end while
long·htira::t rnele cat Answers
to Peachy Baby . CtU 114-71112·
2257.

• 50. reward for inform.tion
leading to wh •ubouta of while
mal e dog lott in ••• of Condor
Sl . and Spring A\11 . All 'NtJitt.
med ium sizt 1nd curly ltit
Answers to Br1mty . C.ll 814992-2085.
lost : 5 month otd mile mbt td
breed dog. Black and brown. Call
614-742-3143 .

PER MONTH WITH

BISSELL
BUILDERS

JO' S GIFT SHOP

Y•d sate left o1111:r1 Ph . 814388· 8449.

$4800

PHONE (6141 992-5009
SPECIAl/ZINC IN WINDOW t {)OOR REPlACEMENT

7

Yard Sale

·······Gampoli'S'·········
&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sate. 10 · 15 ftmil its.
Ewington Towntlou•. 10 min
out of VInton on 180. ThursNov.
20, Frl Nov. 21. for inlonnttk:Jn
cal l Donna Ui011 81 4 -819·
4881 .
.

Yttd sa le Friday Nov. 21 , on old
At. 160 11 evefgrten.

9

Wanted To Buy·

We pay Cllh tOr tate modet 'ctean
used cars.
Ji m Mink Che.&lt; ,· Oids Inc.
Bitt GeneJohn1on
614 -446-3872
TOP C ASH ptid tor '113 model
and ni!Wer used c•s. Smith
Buidi -Ponliac.. 1911 hstern
Aw .. Gall ipolis. C.ll 614·446·
2282 .
WANTED TO BUY used woodS.
coal healefl. SWAIN ·s FURNI·
lURE, 3rd . 6 Olive St. Gallipolis. C1111 &amp;14 -446-3159.

W:tlt buY ,.crap met1l
Short Iron $2 .10 P• cwt
Motor Cast 13.00 P• cwt
Aluminum f .22 Ptf pounit
RadiMors 1.20 p• pound
Ca116U ·682-7575.
•
'used Mobile Home:i Ph. 61'4·
'446-0175,
.

GREAT BEND ELEcTRIC, h.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

992-3410

Bu }'ing daily gold, tilver cOfns
rin_gs , jewel"', ftetling wert.:old
co ms, large currency. Top prtcn. Ed. 9ur•en Barb• Shop
2nd. Ave, MiddiiPOf1, Oh. 614:
992-3476.
:

Huder panet. grll end front
bump er, for 19111 Grtn

moulh

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

· 10.8-tfc

USES FOR .ALUMINUM SHEEn RANGE
FROM. ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HA-RED LAM' SHADES.

.

.beginniBU at 1;00 p :m . F•c:tory

40625 St. Rt. 681

Station•~ Mognrtic

Gardens Calll14·692·

Ra ciAe Gun s.~oot apon10red bV
Ra cine Gun Club. EwrySundiY .

®

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

SIU 23X30X007

~emory

6161

8oh Barton, o-r
10-21·16-t mo.

•Storm Windoww
•Repi11Ce!'111n1 WlndoWI
•New Roofing

614· 446·3 615. Meigs Counly

POMIIOY, OM.

4-15.'86·1c

"At IIIISOnQblo Pricts"

PART-TIME REGISTERED NURSE
11 PM 'TIL 7:30 AM SHIFiT
For 35 Bed SNF·ICF Unit
Contact Rhonda Dailey, RN or

8 PM

40°/o·OFF • •

992-6215 or 992·7314
P-roy, Ohio

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

OUR FRIDAYS to 8 SPECIAL
•

i 90 MULIE.IY AVE.

CUSTOM BUILT

AUCTIONEER: LON NEAL-367-7101

~~:ntil

w•••
'
!Free Estimates)
V. G. YOUNG In

RADIATOR

1-----------l
GUN SHOOT
Business
RACINE ..
Services
1---------; FilE DEPT.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The tnf'IUII r.port Form
990PF fo• Decombo• 31 .
1985. for 1ho Kibble Foundation, Bernard V. F.Atz.

Special Christmas Auction

992-2156

Now Open .Friday

- Plumbing and "'""'" '

•Dryers •Freezers

lie inspection 11 Berntrd V.
FUltz law offtCI, 111t1o W.
SKand Stroot, Pomeroy

ALL GIFTS GUARANTEED

MIDDLEPORT. DEPARTMENT
· STORE
WILL BE OPEN UNTIL
8 P.M. EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT FOR YOUR
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND, ,
.. ·

PHONE 992-2156

Public Notice

Cell now for brochure. Ohio

2 Bla ck &amp; White T.V.' e Ph.
6 14- 446-4347.

tfn

was appointed Executrix of
flle ootete of Or... t Lim·
ben, 1ak1 Drexel Lambert,
decea!od. Iota of 34370
Side Hill Rood , RD 1, Box .
24, Rutland, Ohio 45775.
Rabon E. Budc,
Proa.t1 Judge
una K. NeiHiraod. Cieri&lt;
111!20. 2.7: 11214. 3tc

memorill property btfort

Valley Memory Gardena. C.ll

992-33453/2/ tln

IEASONAIU - R!UAILE

Ohio 45789, during •oguto;
bu1lneu hour. for e period
d 180 dcoys ouboequent 10
publication of thi1 notice.
1111 t8. tt. 20. 2t .
23, 24, 26, 7tc

in~

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

104 Mulllerry AY., Pol!'lroy

614-843-5241

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 10, 1988.
in tho Molgo County Prolllto
Caun, C..o No. 25 ,323.
Edith .E. LAimbert, 34370
Side Hill Rood, AO t , Box
24. RuHond. Ohta 4&amp;77&amp;,

SIWe your lowd on• aome of
the 1orrow &amp; IXI*'II- P~trch81·
need is just good common tense .

- concrete work

F" Aff

·3 Announcements

JRANSMISSIONS

Clfly Sorvkos, Etc.
2S.5 Mill St .. Micldlot&gt;ort

6-17-lfc

---

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On NOIICitnber 17. 198!,
in the Moig1 County Problte
Coun, C11e No. 26.209,
Dorothy M. Calli no, 32712
Collin• Rood, Pa..,...oy,
Ohio 45789 woo eppolmect
Administrator of the ntate
of Robert E. Collin a, de·

Belies and Beaus Square Dance Club Is having an open dance
Saturday, from 8-11 p.m .. at Royal Oak Park. Ca ller will be
Chad .Johnson.

$2'00

The: defendants were denied
Hall and order~ to the Metropolh
tan Correction!\) Center·by Judge
Richard Oweq, 'who said he
feared they mlgh(seek revenge.

New Location: ...
struggle." ,
161 Not11t So&lt;ctnd
But Ronald Go!dstock, In
Michllt,.rt, Oltit 45760
charge of the New York state
SALES
Organized ~rim~ Task Force,
said, "We have Information from
Inside !hat a number of mobsters.
In a position to seek top roles are
preferring to stay In the
background.
"They recognize that a new '
leadership wUI be Immediately 1.1."-..,:..---;---""='-'
targeted as a prize by competing
law enforcement jurisdiction."

CARPENTER
SERVICE
--Roofing
Add••• ,•nd
........
'""9
gutt•r work

SER~CE

Open dance slated for Saturday

SAVE

~::~~Tr=~Y~OU~N~G';S~~A=~=oM=An=c~

Olltitt Dltlly StnliMI Clntifitll D19l.
111 CDUtl $1., Pa•,.,. Olio 4576J·

Museum.

Ohio Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of rain Sunday and Monday.
Highs will be In the 50s Saturday
and Sunday and In the &gt;lOs
Monday. Overnight lo)VS will be
In the 30s early Saturday, ln the
40s Sunday morning, and In the
mid or ~pper 30s early Monday.

escort,

The .Daily Sentinel

CALL

i ll_~~~Lf~~~~d_tj

South Central ()hio
Cloudy tonight. with a chance
of rain or drizzle and a low In the
mid 30s. Becoming mostly sunny
Friday, with highs in the mld40s.
The probability of preciplta·
t!on is &gt;!Opercent tonight atidn ear
·. ;(ero Friday.
Winds will be from the northw·
est at 10 to 20 mph tonight .

and whisked away with a pollee

·-·

LAYAWAY .
NOW

Ohio, area weather scene

Sentinei~ Pilge-13

Business S'e rvices

BULLETIN BOARD

°

EMS units respond to 4 calls

The Daily

PLUMING &amp;HEAliNG

Challenge f' iled

...---Local Briefs·.---

Ohio

Convictions ·to disrupt power
of mob's ruling commission.

.about takeover's aftermath

I

.

'

:~aider tries relieving fears

I

..

f'tv ·

Fury.

Car u te ftbm
1979· 198.2 . Chryslet N 11w
'Yorker, New ,.on Of' Ptyo . Fury.

Call614-992-7075.

•

BUYING RAW FUftSI Ginttng,
Yellow Aool, b..t and dftf·

h!des. Alto Nlllng trt,lng

auppliet, Wh11t Llctl, Nhelltf.t.
HQurs 1:00-9:00. CtoMd W8d.

•
RIDENOUR
TV

L&amp;W ClEANING
CAIPR
UPHOLSTERY
PLUS
446·6323 "Y : .~'!fj1

GeO'R" Buc kt., B14-e&amp;4-4711 .

..

~·

RAYMOND E. PROFFm
'

'

RACINE, OHIO
9Hico 949-2431

Emorgency 949-2516

Good uMd an•• drum . tlall
614-742·2080.
'
W1nted Ia Buy Nndlng tirniHw.
phone 304 ·175·4412. e:006 :00 PM afttr 5 :00 PM 304·

875-3924 ot

-.

304 ·3 72 · 5192 ~

�'

Page-14- The Daily Sentinel
"9

Wanted To Buy

LAFF-A-DAY

44

51

Apartment
for Rent

Household Goods

Television
Viewing

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by larry· Wright

Wented to buy. Standing timber

Coli ,1 14-742-2328.
f.uinished ept

paid. 1 BR . 920 4th. Galllpoltt.
441-4418 1fler 7pm

f ill~l'lYIIIPnt

Furni1hed efficiency t110 utilities paid. share b•t'l. 701 4th,
Gellipolis Call446·4416 after I

Help Wanted

pm
Furnished 3 room• end blth.
cl•n. 1d~IU only, no Pets. Call
61 .. 446-1619

M•kl Christm~~s money, seH
Avon. Make 4&amp; percent Call
614-446-3358.
Sal•peopi•Full or ~rt time to
sell oemecery &amp; mwch C111
114· 446· 3&amp;15 or 614· 592 -

6161 .

Nicety furnished 2 bdr. 1pt.
Adults c;~nly . Inquire at corner
Firtt &amp; Ohve St. at Sh1ppards
Sales &amp; Servtce

Maintenance Ptrton to live in
ap1nrnent complex. Csll 304-

Furni1hld apanment. up1t1irs
Aduhsonty . Ill utilities Plid. Call

• 614-446-9523 .

676-6104.

Progre11ive Heetthcare Facility
Meking full- time &amp;• parHime
RN ' s. Exc•llent •l•rv &amp; benetits. If interested apply at Scenic
Hills Nurllng Center Rt 2 Box

..,.f.... ..,......_

MOM AND ,DAD · looking for
J college funds for your son or
J daughter? The Army National
I Guard can proyide more th.,.
: 818,0001nedu Cationasslstance
1 to qualifi«&lt; individu-'•· Seniors
1 can enlist now and beg1n earn·
, ings $86.00 for one week·end
' Pilf month and daltrV Basic
: Training until June 1987. For a

. FREE INFORMATION PACKET,
• CIU 1 ·800-642· 3619

' ------------~--

: VETERANS · Your prior military
' Stfvtce is worth MONEY. An E·4
J in the Army Nat1onal Guard can
1 e•n up to $131 96 for one
: week-end per month; an E -5. up
*163 80. Other benefits
1 to
f in dude. S50.000 life insurance,
education funding "sis1ance.
retirement, and much more . Call
, 304-875-3950 or 1-8C0 ·642·

l

3619.
' AirlinejoblS17.747toS63.459
t
now httingl CAll job line
• 1-518·459-3535 ext A-1980
: for information 24 hours

ve•.

: leaJticians needed , Studil'l One.
304--675-4510 after 6·00 &amp;75' 2473 uk tor lentil or Lena.

1

31

Homes for Sale

6 rooms.
windows.
buildmg,
Rutland

built 1n porch. :Jtorm
netural gas, utility
0 728 acres located
$24,000 614-682·

6738

3 bedroom 111 alectrtc, air cond,
attached g•age. 2 lots, Gallipolis Ferry, 304-676-2932
ANXIOUS to sell. 3 bedroom
house. new roof and wiring,
536,000 00 negot1able. Point
Pleasant 304-676-6939.
Lease to purchase available on
three bedroom house 1 acre lot,
J1m Hill Road or will accept
trad•m on 1mmecllate purchase,

304-675-3073
Mobile Homes
for Sale

.

NEW AND

someone to cut·a big tree
down • h1UI1way from Glllipoli ~ Ph. 61 .. ·446· 2639
N~ed

17

Miscellaneous

Craftsman 4 V. in ch jointer
plarmer S125.00 e11 cellent condition . Small drill pre1s. 875.00
Ph 614-US-0671 aft« 6 CO

1B

Want ad to Do

Septic T.. kPumpmg. Cammer·
cill &amp; rnidentill. 2 trucks for
prompt service •eo per 1,600
gsil. k&gt;ad . RON EVANS ENTER ·
PRISES. Jackson. Oh. Cell

colloct &amp;14-28e-6930.
Need help with 'tOUr hohday
cl•nlng1 Call Glaubutn Cle•n·
lng Servtct Ph . 614-446-9()27.
Will do cleaning. · home end
oHice. C1ll 614-742-2310 or

614-742-2214.

USED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEl 'S QUAUTV
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml

WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 614 ·446 7274
14:c 70Fieetwood3bdr 2 b•ths
Ml{st sale, for mo rfl inio call
614- 388· 8633 after 4 J1 m

Great B u y - 12~80 2 bdr. mobile
home 24:c28 metal pole build·
lng, .11 pprax 1 1' clearance, e:ctft
hoo k up for mobi lehome. garden
space. ell thil on larg e corner lot,
size 85:c172. No hills to mow. in
Patr io t. sell ing because of
health. Call 614-379·2282.
1984 Schut! 3 8R, 1 4)(70, with
7h .X2() e:cpands on LR &amp; OR ,
h11 space saver microwaYe in
kitchen Total electric. 2 full
bath5. Ow ner will help fin an~ . If
mterested call 614· 446· 6726
Must Sell
1973 Arlington mobil e hom e for
nle Ph 614-446-8000.
Must tell, 12X66 Vlndal e. 14X7
upando . woodburn e r. dish
wa1her. under p1nning. CA. 2
decks with awntng, priced to

..11. Ph . 614· 266· 1608
3 bedroom 14x70 trlilor for sale
Of rent Ch"h1re area
Call
eYenings 614· 388-9776

F1nanc1al

21

3 bedroom 14~70 t111ilor for •Ia
or rent Cheshire trea. C•ll
eYen lngs 114· 388· 9776.

Business
Opportunity

'79 V1ctorian mobile home, 1
a ere, 12:c1 6 room adi11tion, frorit
dedi. t26,000.00, Glenwood,

! NOTICE I
T~E 0~10

W Va. 304-578-2018

VALL£V PUBLISH-

ING CO recommend• that you
do bustness with people you
know. 1nd NOT to send monev
tlwough the mall until you hwe
1nvestigec.:l the offering.

·71 two bedroom mob1l e home,
halt acre land, laon, price
SB.OOO 00 Call 304- 675 ·

6349
1974 three bedroom 12d6
mobil e home, stove and rafriger·
ator, per1ty carpeted, new water
heat e r and g1s furn1ce .

ATTENTION INVESTORS
Take ldvantsge now b1fore the
new tax laws. 8 unit: apartment
compl8111 , iocated tn Wellston,
Oh fully .. nted. rent11r1 ptoy all
utilh iM. Income over 81 ,400
plf' mo Sell price t96.000 call
Days 614-592· 1, 89 or even·
ings 6U-594· 2874.
Opere•ing ABC Club in Po int
PleMint area, 3200 sq foot
~uilding on 2 a cr tll of land.
30,..~15- 3509 8'11'ening1.

23

Professional
Services

Starks Tree snd Lawn Sarvtee
Hedges . shrub s . bu s h el
trimmed. l1ndscapmg. stump
and leaf removtl. 304-676·

2842 or 571-2010

}

41

Nice large 2 bedrooms, Msln It
Cheshire, cletn, fur11ished. wa·
tar ptid 8200 00 mo. Ph .
~

Houses for Rent

Beautiful 3 bedroom houte In
Syracul8. Oepos1t and references requ1red Cell 614-992·
6298. 9·6, MondiY thro~gh
Saturdav

House for sale by owner Lo·
Small 1 bedroom hou~e . Total
c Btad mTuppersPiatns, Ohlo, on electric. In Minersville be~ide
State Route 7 Seven rooqu, Bulk Plant. Clll614-992· 621&amp;.
bath. full basement. large lot
Prt eed to sell Must see to , 2 bedroom house for rent In
appreculle . Call 614-667·3400. Middleport. Completely remodeled. New carpetmg through·
4 bedroom home, 1 V2 baths, out New cabinets. t275 P•
garage. located on Gravel Hill
month plusAeposit Call 614-770 Ash St Middleport , Ohio. 992-5868
&amp;42, 500 Call 614-992-5714
-::----::-c------,-- -JcSmall 2-bedroom home in MidHouse partly furnished 5 acres dleport Both with tub and
on R1mbow R1dge. Good hunt·
shower, attached g1rage, v-rd.
ing 115,000 614· 853-5440
Carpeted, new stove and refrigerator Just r~ght for single or
2 br, kitchen , b81 hroom, with working couple. Sorry. na peu
laundry room. living room &amp; or children accepted. $171
dining room, 1llelec. Appro:c . 7
month plus •ecurity depotit .
m1les from Pt Pl. on Rt. 62. 2
Phone 614 · 992· 6292 . afttt
tracts eppro:c 1 acremoreor less 6p m. or weekends
overlooking Kenewh.!l River
140,1100 Call 304 675 5440 3 bedroom hou• with garage
but ween 8:30 and 4 :30.
for rent or sale. Call 614 -742·

32
"

.....,,...,...,.,

I'm a drain surgeon."
'1"'__________

cr-od sc:hoolo majo01ng on

by Nov. 22 614-992-7180.

Coli &amp;14-446-7026.

ber
"I'm
no
ordinary
p'
urn
·
'

Apphoations lor the Jbsition of L-_ _.....;_ _ _ _ _ _ _
ActMties Director at Pomeroy r··
Hellth Care Center are being
accepted. Graduates from ec-

Still time to h8\le your own Avon
Chnstrres. 36 to 50 percent
dtiCOunt. Free sign up if you call

ftA 7MnH

K

t4,600 00 304-882-2686 ··-

tar 4:30

2427.
2 bedroom houp .n country

pertly finished sso deposit
8150 mont" plus ut1Uti81. !J,14-

843-5440.
Recently remodeled, 3 bedroom. 1 Y1 bath home with wall
to well e arpeting 8275 pet
month or sell land contrtct.
located near Addlsan. Call
614· 992·6843 after 6 .00 p.m.
Clean 2 bedroom home m
langsville area. Storage bulldmg
and cellar on 1 acre lot.

814-742 -264 t
2 bedroom hou• , turnih.'ed
with stove and refngtrator only,
fully Cll'peted and clean. 507'/J
Second St . New Hsven. 304882 -2505 anytime.
Cute 2 room couage with bath,
furnished, utilitl11 paid, 866 00
week. deposit ,equir.:l. 304·
675-3100 or 676-6509
Four rooms 1nd g•au• 2323
JefleuonBivd 1160.00 14x70
mobile / home Camp Conlev

8226 00 304-675-1371 .
House for rent also 1l~ing
rooms. 304· 676-6720.
2 bedroom house, P,oint Pie•
sant . 304-175-6753.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr ., all utilities paid except
el ec ., turn or unfurn., MC.
deposit required Convenient
location. Call 114-446-8558 or

614-446 -4778
2 bdr. fully furnishtdedultsonly,
util pa1d Clll 614-446-411()

2 bedroom mobile home for rent
Ph. 814-448-0722.
Mob1le Home 2 bedroom , fur·
n11hed 1n gallipolis , rent
8200 00 mo UOO.OO d~otit.
H lntlfnted Ph. l1,.·448-7199
dsys or 814 · .. 41 - 91539
evenings
2 bedfoom in centenary , Ph

8t4-448-4292

Business
Buildings

.

Otf1 ce sp1ce · Storespace ln Pt.
Pleasant. A·One Re al Estate Ph.
304-675· 5104

35

&amp; Acreage

Lots

ranges Ska9g• Appllences.
Upp.; ~tver Rd. beaktt Stone

3 Bedroom r1nch. Aodnert Vllllgell . $28&amp;.00 per month. plus
deposit. ref•enc• required.
Bltckburn R. .lty Ph. 514-441·

0008.
2 bdr mobile home In Evergreen. C•ll 814·441,032.
2 bedroom trail• fOJ rent. Ctote
to schools 1nd 1torM. Clll 1ffer

5·00 p m 614·992-69U.

992-6236.
12:c65. 3 bedroom furnished
W-D awning 1nd und•pinnlng
$200 plus deposit tnd utillti•

614-992-7479 .

2 bedroom mablle home, Mid·
dleport , 0 . Ret•ence with 11curily d.,oslt. 304-882-3217

Estate

'100X300 h11 G1Uia county
water. IOe~Ud At . 180 ,
83.000.00 fttt lot . Ph. 614·

614-256-6210

Modern 1 bdr apartment. Single
person preferl'fld. No pets Re,f·
erence. C1ll 614-448· 206&amp; af·
t• &amp;pm.

Electric counter top stove &amp;
oven, copper colored $150.
Automatic WISher $126 00,
small elee. dryer S100.CO 2
recliners t30.00 each

2 bedroom, pertty furnished
apartment off Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio. large patio and
yard Call 614-992-6886 after
6 :(10 p.m
2 1nd 3 bedroom eplrtments
•nd hou•• in Pom•oy or
Middlepor1 Furntshed or untur·
nishld. P~ own utilities C.ll
days 114-992-2381 .
2

bedroom. furnl1hed. new
c~tpet f225. per month. Oep·
os1t and referlfce requ iretl.
Glenn 81••11614-949-2801 .

New one bedroom apt . in
Middleport . Cell 614·992-6304
or 61.4-446 ·1652 after 6:00
pm.

5 room unfurnished 1pt. for l'flnt.
Call &amp;14-992-6434 or 304882-2666.
2 bedraom, newty remodeled
upst11rs apt with riverview
Equipp.:l kitchen, ICCMI tO
washer and dryer. free trech
pickup: no pets. reference and
deposit requned 614·992 ·
6639 anytimeor 614-992· 3,.89
M1•6 :CO pm.
1 and 1 V, bedroom 1pt available
1t Riverside tor rent. BQic rent
sterts at 1179. plus ut1htie1.
S200 ~~&lt;:ur1ty deposit required
lnquireal &amp;14-992-7787.
1 be*oom •pt. for rent. Basic
rent 1t1t1s $216. 1 month th8t
~ .. , utilitiel. Deposit
required of UOO Under New
FmHA reg~lltlons. Taking •PPiicalions for rent1l i11lsance fat
low income aenim cltilans.
Contact V1ll1ge M1nor Apt.
Middleport . 614·912· 7787.
EqUII HOusing 0ppor1unlty
APARTMENTS.; mobile hames.
hou••· Pt. Ple. .ntandGallipolit. 114-441·8221 .

46

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms end
tight houM k"pmg rooms. P•k
Central Hotel C.ll 6U-446·

0756
Rooms for rent. d.,.. week.
month. Galli• Hotel C•ll 614-,.46-9680. Rent u low as S120
month
Furnished room 919 2nd. GaH ~
polis. $116. Utilittes pd Shwe
bath. Single mala. Call 446·
4416 after 7pm

46

Space for Rent ,

367-7690.

31

Totll electtlc latsavallabl e In the
K ~ K MobHe home park on
2146 Eastern Ave. Move in now
PlY no rent untMJ•n 1987 Ph

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. a1r , pool. g••g•. Nice.
Commercial property, corner
loU • highwly fronflge. List
with us. Wt hi'IJI buytn A-On e
A•• Estlt,.aroker. Call 304--

448-2430 or 446-0608.
K &amp; I( Mobile Hom•. 2 snd 3
bedroom mobile homes, 304-

175-3000.

•

304-676-3000
1 92 let". with three blldroom
mobile home. vu heat. CA.
tt0111ge btdg. $16.000. C.ll
Ho bstetter Rulty, 614· 742·

e74-8104 "'304-174-538&amp;
BeMitiful hom• in Flltwood1

3092

.,.. of Pom•oy IVIIilbll. New

Two b.o-DOm trlil.-, coupt•.
one small child. r.tertnees 1nd
dePosit, Everett Schwaru, Rt. 1
locust Lane. Point Ple... nt b1ck
ofK&amp;tC .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy
Mobil home lot1, 1m111 chtldrtn
sccept.ci, Rt 1, Locust Ro1d
MotMI home lois. Oh io Atver
Road Md Potters Creah Aoute1 .
,....304-11715· 1071.
Susin•• or Office S~ace for
rant. New Haven. 304-173·
5024 or 304-882-3267.

&amp;14-441-2319.

49

For Lease

'
Winter IPtcial S400.00. ·1 ye•
1.... mini f•m . 14 leta•. 2
mil• from town , bridt house,
centrtl hell .nd 11r cand, new
deck, gtrden. unalt b•n. pond,

304-176-&amp;271.

61

Hou~ehold Goods

1181 14X60 for 111e or rent. 1
mile toUth of gallipoUs D1m Ph.

41

114-261-1019
lroomhouM. 1.21cr• Ooubl;e
c• . . .ge. LoCIIted on RoM Hilt

'

a.paln priced 120,000 Call
114-171-2513.
For •Ia: 8 room house. 41ots. E,
81 Pomaroy. Ctll 814·
" ... "27 after 8 :00 pm.
MW• ....,.. 8 r.. m. bllh, 1.,.
"1• eoo&lt;1 loclllon 123,700.
Melle off• C.ll814--992-2102.

' 44

Apartment
for Rent

Houses for' Rent

2 bdr. houft with gwaga c•·
pated, cur1ains, dishw11her •
relrig Ne• new city pool, 105
Klneon Dr Rent 1300 mo. dep.
• Ia. . required. C1ll 614-448--

Olive St .. Glilllpolis. New a. uslld
stove•. a pc: wood LA
1uit1 1388. bunk b. . $199,
antron reclln•• 191. new &amp;:
uMd bedfoom suit•. l'lng•.
wring• With••· • sho•. New
livingroom 1Uh• t190-11599,
lamps, 1l1o buvlng -.1 &amp;: wood
wood~ca.t

oto\ooo. Calll14-441-3159.

County

Regency- Inc. 2 bdr., kttchtn,
nice, good locttlon, furnished,
re•onllble. C•ll304-87&amp;-510'

or 304-176-7437.

Nicety furnlth.ct mobh home
CA 6 hNI, excel locatton,

aduho anly, Call114-441·0331

..e.,.1_&lt;-_4_4_&amp;_-o_7_2_2,..
. ----

&amp;131A 3rd. Ave. 1. bdr prlvltl

d room hou11 , 928 firtttve Ph.
114-44fli-31,.5 eftM 4p.m

bath. 1140 p• '!"'· Dopoth
required. C1ll 114-441-4222
•bltween I l 5 .

Electrie cook stove and corr
plete mecat bed Call 614· 99£

2698 .
P1ckens Used Furniture Good
quality used furniture. Open 9 to
6 or call for appointment
304--675·6483 or 676-1450
Green rug with pad, approx
8 ' K1J 'h', 304-675-1965.

64

0

Appll~ncel

lnQ. Good

Vlll~tt

Furntture, nM • u1ed.

Urge MCtlon of qu.ltty furnl·
tur• . 1211 E1111rn Ava .,

Hotpo6nt Wlllh• 1nd dryer,
'ftlhW new 1nd dryer u..d 3
tim•. hNVy duty, phon• 304--

&amp;78-2130.

28 lnclo coloo TV, 304-67112816.
M1ple h~tch like new, 180.00.

304-171-2186.

'

Couch. ch•. 2 end t•bl•.

304-171-3818.

6:05
6:30

,

'

304-676 6643 ohor 5·00 .
'78 J•epherd top, 63,000mllts,
S2. 450 00 Phone 304-576-

2107

74

Motorcycles

6:35
7:00

Stapleton's Cych!t. Rabuildeble

&amp; ptlrts.
6,4. 446·.
r'---------~-..,------------1 cycles
7 414 after
5 p . mCall
on weehd.,
1

56 B

62

uilding Supplies

Budding Supplies
Surplu a-Cioaeout1-Buyouts
1 Wood burning sheet met1l
stoves similar to Funklin
859 .96 each or 2 for S100 CO.
2. Stael Insulated prehung
door's. no brick mold 69 .95 .
3. Interior prehung door's all
1!1!81 and fimahes S29.96 each
4 42" 'Vanity with (81 marble top
8149.96 each
6 . &amp;"by 20' White commercial
gutter S1 .00 per tt
6 . 1.nd2p;:Fibergllntub'sand
showers white and color J
815996to819995.
1 Prefinished oak Hooring l/." T
~ 23A'W random length T G
Gunstalk and nature! fm1sh
S176sqtt.
8 60% off Vmyl siding trim
O .S .Corners 84 00 , ln s 1de
Corners S3 00, 1 2-J Chanel
t150.00 !5) colora
9. Wood R11of Truss 20' to 20 '
$10.00 to 25.00.
10 Temp•ed lntulated Glass
Panels W ' T x 32'' W. :c 76" H.
829 96 each
11 Scrubbable prapasted vinyle
lll covering doubleroll 86.99
~ 'Z lnsulatedwhitestormdoor's
1 11o. T x 36"W:c80"H
Reg .
S129 96 Now S89 96.
13 4" :c8":cW' .R Guard Foam .
Board Foil Face $3 99pc
14 Decorator Wood Penelirig
t6 59 Seconds 14.99
16 Keyed or Bed (R) locks
· t3 99 each
16 6pc Hight Gloss tub wall kits
with shelves 829 96

1980 Hondo CR -80 moton:ycle

56

Pets for Sale

F1rewood for Nle S 30.00 PU
lold Call Roger Maeda. 614:

8 Bo11er puppi81, 6 female. 3
m1le Will bereactv Nov 21 Ph.
614-266·6867.

Firewood deliverfld Oak &amp; hick·
ory. split. HEAP voueh er, pickup

614-367-0394.

Uve Xmas tretJ, stone. mulctt,
f1rewood . S 35 'coal. delivered
Heap vouchers accepted Don's
landscapes . Call 614 -4,.6 ·

9048
S1wmill 3 Block standerd aize.
new wood , good condit1on
S1 ,600.00 w1th out blade or
power unit Ph 614-446-8038

- -- -- --

Groom I Suppl¥ Shop
Profess1onal SerYice. all s1yles,
all breeds. state At. 1,.1 Galltpolis, Ohio 46631, Julie Webb, P"

614-448-0231 '
AKC m1meture Schneuzer puppy
salt &amp; Pepper male Bwks. old,
shots &amp; wormed 5126 00 call
614-446-4680.1
German Short He1r Pointer.
excellent bird dog. $75.00.

304-675-2169 .

57

- - -lc-

Firewood tor sale S36 pick-up
load. Detivered. Heap ·vouch••
accepted
~-'-------- - lc ­
Firewood for sale. 836 pick-up
lo1d. Delivered. He ap Vouchers

occeotod. Cell 614 742-2488
M1:ctd hardwood slabs. S12 . per
bundle Containing appro:c 1 V:z
tons FOB Ohio Pellet Co
Pomeroy. Ottio.. Call 614-992-

986-3969 .
Firewood. Se•oned hardwood.
split 1nd delivered $40. EA· Iarge
P u. load. 614-992-3110.
Vitama11er exercise bicycle and
DP Bocfottone Plus Mult i Gym.
loth brand new. Ert:eUent con-

ditkm. Call614-247-3898.

Coal deUvered. Run of Mine.
842. 1 ton, lump, $&amp;6. 1 ton;
Call Don Hoyd, Forest Acres
Plfk, Rutlend. 814· 742· 2800

Kimbel Cet•tra Organ witfl pro
entertemtl', e11c cond, 304•468·
1666 after 6 ·30 PM
Kimball plano, artfst consol e.
call 304-676-2611 after 4 00

PM

58

Fruit

Appl•. all large size. 7 varieties,
by bag Of bushel, all fruh:a Hd
vegttebl., WI ICCept food
stamps, open 7 d-rs, J1ckaFruit
Mkt, Rt, 36. Hend••on, W V•

Shop

for

Chriumas with

FU LL£R BRUSH PRODUCTS,
Call304-67(-t090
ChrlltrN1 treH , 6 to 14 foot.
UO 00 each. Three mU11 ou t
SMd HMI Road on left

55

Building Supplies

Building Ml1erills
llodl, brick. ltwer pip•, windows. lintels. etc. CI1Ud1 Win·
tars, Rio Grinde. 0 . C.ll ln4-

248-8121 .

Concrete blocklalleilll yard or
deUvary M11on 11nd. Q .. llpolls
, Block Co., 1231h Pint St. ,
O.llipolll. Ohio Call 11,.· 448·

2783.
Pole luUdlngs by, Quality
Bulld.-1. Worklhops, c•ports.
tnlmll ahetters. v••g•. Free
altimet•• · Pflont 114 -384·

8712

76
3 Quarter Simmental Bull and
Hiefer calves U&amp;O each. 614·

Elte'ric guhart, tube type 1mp,
18 In speek• in uu. Will t .. de
for camcord•. or VC.R Reoorder
lo Comort. Ph . &amp;14-318-8706

Game
Gl Speedweek
fD C1J Too Close for Com-

843· 6263 Gayle Price.
Budget transmiulons, used &amp;
2 Hereford cows w1th calves . rebuilt . Tool c onverters &amp;
Call 614·992-6854
transfer cases. Will deltver Cash.
&amp; Csrryor Install call 614· 4466 ye., old Quarter Horse . ..870 ~r, 614-379-2220
geld1ng. hu been shown 4-H.
S650.00 firm, 304-675-6799 GM automatic tnnsmlulon
after 5 30
!used &amp; rabu lit) in dudes 360
short tail for chevy truck. Also a
chrysler ve tltltnsmiasion. all
64 Hay &amp; Grain
good condition. Ph. 614-446·

fort

FRANK AND ERNEST
yourv~ GOT'

A 8usy CAMPAI&lt;;N
~t:/'IEPVLfii- ToMY, $~NATO~ ... .SHifi CHANG~ Ai iHE .
. T~ANS'Mif.StON PLAN'T", GP.ASS '

0986
1976 Chrytler automatic trans million w1th under drive. will fit
school busn II recrut1onal
veh1ctes, in good shape Ph.

large round bales of hl'f, 810
each. Square bales. ~.1 . 2&amp; each
Call 614 -446·1062 after 6 .

· · f!.Odr'f' f'OLijlCJ&lt;II'IG AT THE:
JOt&gt; fA~M, STUMPING A"r Tlit::
nf.18t:{'e C:::OMPAI'IY ANt&gt; ttANC&gt;•

614-446-0986 .

Transportaliun

For(t 4-wheel dr1ve. front end &amp;
transfer case *350.00 Ph. 614-

245-9694.

71

~AICIN6

360 eng1ne 1nd transrr-ission.
52.000 actual m1le1 S200.

Autos for Sale

1974 Dodge alec. seats e11
runmng cond. body great shape.
New battery, JU I1 winterized
AM -FM Caueue, all new t.res
Asktng 5600 00 will tak egun on
trade. Can be seen anytime at
636 Jeeklon pike Apt . 88-B
acr0111 from OonneUi'a,

'

A.L LEY OOP

Services

81

1973 Sed1n DeVille 57.000
miles. new r~ditla , m nv new
parts VMy good c
1t1on.
81 ,800 OC Ph. 614· .-46· 0

1979 LTO II, AC ,PS,PB,AT,
8600 00 Ph 614-446-3093

VICT&lt;=*&amp; II.J11H ~&lt;ESS ..

Wi-+AT!S YaiR NAME'~
WHERE IX) 'IOU L lVI: '?-

YOU'RE NEW IN lDWN,
A REN 1T 'VOI.l ':!

1~75

Plymouth, 4 door, •ir,
cru iM, PS , PB. good cond.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

198() Plymouth Horizon TC~.
t1 ,600.00. 304-468·1659

Anlique trsctor tOr Nle. f ·20
Farmall 1829-late 1930. SteM
wheels . Auns good. $300 .
worth of .xtrt perts, tl7&amp; ,
080 Will con1ider ptr11111r•de

1186 110 ptdl-up. Short bed
with 1liding gl•s wll\dow. sun
roof, AM·FM caueHe . Only
19,000 miles Asking U600 or
tllu o'I.W ~ments C.ll 61 ...
941-22152 after 8 :00pm .
1978 Ch"'Y l.uv pickup . Auto·
metic • t&amp;91. Call •614· 742·

814-742-2067.

3092
. - - - - - - - , - - - - - -lc-

New •nd u•d paris for Whit11.
Olivers. M·M. Deutl! tracton.
Sidll's Equipment Co.. 304-

1974 Ford F180, 3&amp;1 engine,
•c . work vehlde with like new
1luminum toPper, nftdl some
bO~ work As 1s 1996. C.ll

BARNEY
WATCH
TONGUE.

TIMES NOT TO BRING
ANIMALS IN TH' HOUSE

'•'

878-7421

.

International 1210 Grinder
Ml1111r;- exc cond, 304 · 273·

4Zt6.

1 &amp;.000 b·ulhtlgr•ln bin tor rent ,
Morgan· 1WaodiiWn Fsrm. 304·

87&amp;-121&amp; or 176-2278
'
Tobaceo stripper. eleettic po~red , -',most new, 304--§75·

13308.

814-742-2746.

'815 Chevy 5 · 10, 4 eyl. 4 tpeed.
AM-FM CMHttl, 21.000 milft,

304-882-3487.
Truck - 1986Chevy&amp;-10 Ma:c ~
8 cyl.. automatic: 304-676·

6375

'7&amp; OMC 360. AT. PS. good
pelnt, camper top, rNke offer,

304-675-2107.

PEANUTS.

explodes e1 1he airpor:t . (70

~

- - : - - - -- •'

1-l Elf!

'(OU
DOIN6?COME BACK!

A &amp; M Custom Couches arr d :
Reupholstery , &amp;t At 7 , Crown 1
Chy . Oh . tU-2151· 1470, Eve. 1
614-446-3438. Open d .... 8 to
6, Sat. 9:30 to 1 :30. Old &amp; nUphostered

.

~-~ -

--J,

mtn.}

.

12:00 CIJ Burns 8o Allen , .
(!) Dewey St..eno ·Ladles
Pro Bowlero.'Tour 'Coverage from Las Vegas , NV.
190 min.)IR).
I]) Jefferson•
8 liJ Rawhide
D (JI Tales of the Unexpected

t 2:05 CD Portrait -, of Ameri"'':

MinneiiOIII 160 min .)

'

concern

39 Abstract

season
48 German

sets a country which prod·

the bomb1ng death of a
young wife whose limousine

20 Succinct

Count Fl eet
47 Church
city
DOWN
I African
lake
DAILY CRJIP'I'Oi:

11!'20

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for an9ther. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
hipts. Each day the code lettet:S are different , .
CRYPTOQUOTE
11-20

mick
fD liJ M•A•S•H
® Cqnstitution : That Delicate Balance
@ The Honeymooners
11 :03 CIJ Fools on the Hill
11 :30 D (1) @ Tonight Show
(60 min.) In Slereo
C!J SportsCenter love
I]) WKRP in Cincinnati
flllliJ Taxi
0 Cil ABC News Nightllne
(jj) ®Magnum, P.l .
GJ @ Night Haat O'Bnen
and Glambone inves1iga1e

Coel and limestone ·d81ivery ·
l&amp;rvice. 304· 875-319&lt;1!

gems
7 Buchwald
8 Sourpuss
9 SunderPd
12 Minuscule 26 Fuss
35 Russ1an
17 • _ Maroa" 27 Oehussy's
c1ty
19 Editor's
"La - "
36 Plungerl
mark
29 Otolugost's 38 Poe l

dcvtce
46 Cotatoon or

Naws

7397.

.....

boxl!19 Coverage from Lake
Helen, Fl (90 min )
fD liJ Odd Couple
IIl Africans: Garden of
Eden in Decay !CCI A look
onlo the problems lhal be-

ffi Herdcastle and McCor,

~...,.,------~~~ ,

6 Bogus

6-++-+-+-

m~nl

Coal, lim w tone. gravel. , etc. ~
Delivered 1 ton and up Jim •:
Lanier, 304·675· 1247 or 67&amp;-

5 Bad site

,.,....,.....,....,,_;.rr-

Ciil@ News
10 ·15 1]) MOVIE: 'The Stone
Killer'
10:30 Cil Bill Cosby Show
llll liJ INN News
Ciil T~ny Brown's Journal
11:00 IJIJJIIJDIIlOOQ(J2J @

Water Hau ling,
ru sonable ra t eiS. imm ediate
2.00() gallon delivery , ci1terne; ,
pools. well etc call 304-571- ' '
2919 .
~'

~

Stereo

own. 160 m1n.)

W~ttters o n ' s

--- ~----~~

min I Pen 2
9:30 0 CD @ Night Court In

®I Q ® Kay O'Brien (60

Dillard s Water Dehvery. Ctst·
erns pool &amp; well Anytim e but ,~•
Sundav. 614-446-7404
~ f

(Lat.)

4 "The Cruel

collector

uces other countries ne·
cessit1es rather than 1ts

1

Mowrey ' s Upholtterlng tervln9 '
tri countyarea 21ve••· ThebMt
In furniture uphalsllrlng. C.ll
304 · 175 · 41 &amp;4 for tree

VOUR

WOMAN!!

Jam es Boy s W.11t er Serv1 ce. Also pools ftll ed . Call614-25 6-1 141
or 614-446-1175 01 614-44679 11

Upholstery

WELL, ANYWAY, HES
CH E;;EI&lt;FLJ L .

2 Whetstone
31lefore

19 Oesire
21 - of
31 1\p~ere
being
21 Watch it!
tricks
33 "My 40 Years ago
22 Old Tokyo
Cries
42 Hen party
24 Ancient
kmgdom 23 Gained
for You"
topic
28 Worship
25 Parking - 34 Sidekick ·44 Gypsy
29 Wear aw ay
30 Finished
31 Churchman
32 ·over -·
34 Jet-engine
housing
37 Generation
38 Wager
41 Appetite
rouser
43 Shaner
45 Liflmg

(!) PKC American Kick-

85 General Hauling ;
~--------------~. :

87

d•scredtt hts twm brother go
awry when the Ashbys pre-

life crimes , and an eJiCam ina·

•

Ohio. C.ll 114-441· 9777. eve.
1114· 441-31592. Up from tr.ctors with warrtnt.., owr 40 used
lrtctors. 1000 tools.

(CC) Stmon ' s schem es to

lion of why women marry
men in pnson. (60 mtn.) In
Stereo.

PlUMBING
AND HEATING
~"
Cor Fourth and P1 n11
GaiUpolis. Ohio
,
Phone 614·446- 3888 or 614· ,
446-4477
~

Trucks for Sale

In

trosp ecttve of J1mmv Cart·
er 's 1976 pres1dency. an
interview wnh comedian
Garry Shandhng, a look at
best sellers based on real·

:I TOLD VOU A HUNNERT

82

0600 00, "" 304-773-5303.

jealous

~

night's stories tnclude a re-

A1hby Construct•on. c erpentery. remodal ing, raom 1dd1tion.
ettment block work, roofmg,
interior end exterler painting,
siding. Roofing. Free animates.
304-675-644&amp; or 675-5152.

1977 Toyota. New t1rt1. new
bltlef¥ Excellent gas miiHgl,
good condition. 81600 Cell

ACROSS
I Chevy
of comedy
6 Covenanl
10 Sweet
substance
II 01reclion
sign
13 Pil asters
14 Gawk
15 Sandra
or Ruby
16 Emulated
Moffet
18 Nectar

10:00 0 CD @ Fast Copy To-

en-3e02

7606.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

pare to w elcome a new hmr
to the1r famtly estate l60

Rotary or cable 1001 dullmg,
Most wells completed same d...,
Pump saln and serv~ce 304·

1979 D1tsun 310 AM· FM
cuaette, good mileage, front
wheel drive 8 1495 080 Cell
6,4- 992-7039 or 61 .. · 992-

t&amp;OO. Call &amp;14-988-4302.

~~-~f!t'

C1J @ Cheers !CCI

Sam

"

.

(CCI (60 mon .)
® Mystery: Brat Farrar

MORTY MEEKLE AND .WINTHROP

11 -10-11

I.

(60 m1n.)

Starks Tree and lawn Sei"v1ce.
Hedges 1hrubs , bu s h u
trimmed, landsc aping end
stump remov1l. Leaf remowl
304-576· 2010 or 576-2842.

CROSS • SONS

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 36 W. Gallipolis,

GA . 12 hrs.)IR).
®NFL F&lt;!Dtball: Los
Angeles Raiders at San
Diego Chargers ICC) 13
hrs I
fill (1) MOVIE: 'A Fistful of
Dollars'
Mac.Neii-Lehrer
®

I]) 0

®I Ill ® Knot's Landing
•·Lf)

NORTH
.AKQ9
.J7
+A 7
.KJ964

I

hosts th1s look into space
and the possibility of intelll·
gent hfe on other planets.

0

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , experienced c~rpenter, electrician,
mason, painter, roofing (includ·
ing hot tar appllcst10nl 304·
&amp;75-2088 or '676 · 7147.

1974 LTD Ford. 400 engine,
needs some work. As is *200.

1970 Chewy lA 1on fl1tbed
pldltup Auto , VB. good tires.

A missed
opportunity

ffi 700 Club
IIl Nova: Is Anybody Out
There iCC) Loly Tomhn

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
re!"oval. Call 304-675· 1331 .

742-2753
- - -- - - - - - -lc-

'

CAR Atlanta Journal 500

Coverage from Hampton,

make

2454.

1978 lincoln Mark 4 Onty
64.000 mil• Good condi11on.
First $1760 takes •t Call 614·

614-268-6867.

Gl Auto Racing '86 : NAS·

Stereo

RON: s Televis ion Serv ice
Houae calls on RCA . Ouuar1
GE . Specialing in Zenith Call
304· 576-2398 or 614 446-

1980 Trans AM . low mileege.
auto. PS. Pl . air stereo. CB,
asking S4,500.000 Not a flot
rod, if not sold will btl t111d ed in.
Call 614-446-2746

1985 Ford Ranger in good
condition, assume loan, Ph.

James 'Jacoby

Norm to JOin h1s lodge ~ Dtene
uses a lovesiruck Student to

446-0294

3308

Maasey Fer~son . New Holland.
Bush Hog Sil• &amp;. Service Over
40 uMd tltctors to choa• from
&amp; complete line ot new &amp; used
equipment . Largest •lection in
S .E. Ohio.

BRIDGE

While Cliff mes to persuade

01\E SI-IOOLOO'T canJSE

SWEEPER and sew1ng machine
rep&amp;ir. parts, and suppliea Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleanet. one half mile up
Geo rges Creek Ad Call 614-

1974 Volhnwagen. ch•ap. mo·
tor good, S160.00. 304-676-

814-286,1461 .

In Stereo.

mCoral Jungle

9:00 0

Unconditional lifetime guaran·
rae Local ;ef•encee furnished
Free estimltes C.ll collect
1· 814-237· 0488. d.., or n&amp;ght
Rogers Basement
W1terprootlng.

1979 LTO II, AC.PS.PB ,AT,
0800.00 Ph . 814-448-3093.

72

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-lETS lNSWEIS
Agency - Savor - LBnkY - lnclae - ASKING
I had *n billed for consultation eos11 for uklng my lawyer
a queatlon when I ran Into him on the street. Today I saw him
and said"Good morning. I wu telling, noi ·ASKING . "

In Stereo

EEK &amp; MEEK

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1976 Nove good motor 304-

U.S . 35 W•t. Jackson, Ohio

of Fortune
1D ® @ Jeopardy
@Benson
7:35 ffi The Honeymooners
8:00 IJC1J @ CosbyShow(CC)

mon's Mines'

1973 pinto runs good $275.00

6815

Farm Equipment

UNS CRAMBlE FOR
AN SWE R

8:30 IJ C1J@ Family Ties (CCI

ph. 6)4-448-0183

PRINT .NUMB ER ED

'"# lE TT ERS IN SQU ARES

Here is another page in the book of WEST
EAST
mangled defensive plays. Against four · +.. .
.76H
.Q 10
spades, West led the heart three. De- • K 6 4 3 2
+K642
clarer played low from dummy and +J 1o 6 • 3
.AQ6
won the ace"as East played the 10 . . +to 7 2
Now came a low club to dummy's
SOUTH
jack, won by East's queen. Naturally
+Jt0832
East now cashed the beart queen. Just
• A9 6 5
11 naturally, ,West allowed East to
• Q9
• 53
bold the lead with that queen . And that
was it for the defense . .East played
Vulnerable: Both
back a spade, but declarer won in his
Dealer: North
band and played another club, guessIng to put in dummr&gt;s nine. That made West
Nor1b East
Soatb
dummy's club king a winner to take
Pass
I+
'
I+
Pass
Pass
care of declarer's second diamond los- Pass
Pass
er, so the game was made.
A cursory analysis shows that the
Opening lead: • 3
contract would easily be set if West selected a diamond as his open\Dg lead.
But In the battle of the bridge hand,
'
'
previous plays are history. West was clarer ducks the diamond, East will
supposed to do his best to set the con- wm the k1ng.
tract after the unfortunate heart lead, How can West know that East startbut he missed his chance. All he had to ed with the heart Q-10 alone instead of
do was overtake East's queen of Q-l0-1? With the latter holding, lt'ls
hearts and lead a diamond . If declarer correct for East to play back a low
rises with dummy's ace, draws three heart. Finally, if declarer bad started
rounds of trumps ending in his hand with sil trumps headed by the jack,
aDd sheds a diamond from dummy on nothing was going to work lor the
the heart nine, East .will ruff. If de- defenders.

.

@ MOVIE: 'Which Way Is
Upf'
8:05 ffi MOVIE : 'King Solo-

Home
Improvements

~y filhng

ald Perrin
(jj) Wheel

James Burke investtgates
the root s of the Industrial
Revolution in 18th century
England and observes the
changes wrought by indus·
tnal1za tion . l60 min)

500 Ph 614-388-8358
1979 T· Bird. 77.000 miles. PS,
PB , AC . Cruise . AM - FM
cassette, $1 ,900.00 Ph. 614266· 6267 after 4p.m

.

By Jamea Jacoby

®J Ill @ Fresno (60 min I
Part 5 of 5
® Day the Uni•erse
Changed. A Personal View
by James Burke iCC) Host

614-985-3839

1969 Ford 4 -wheel , 1973
Chevy pickup, 1986 Honda CR

.

0 IIl Judge
ffi Fall· and Rise of Regin-

Newshour

Motors Homes
l!t Campers

576-2434.

61

(jLOVE FAc:;Ttl
'LO

CA~TER ' S

(:. L1vestuck

THE'

Oeerflunten Sp eci all TruCk
camper. Sleeps six Stove . ice
box , furnace. porta -potty C.ll

1982 Chevrol18t lm~la. 1982
CheYrolet C•price. 304-875·

I ,orin SuppiiHS

AT

304-675-1852

79

~

•

m

Auto Parts •
&amp; Accessories

0

18 I

I

Complele the chuckle quolod
111 the mtU1ng words
L.--'--L--L-.1--L-...J you develop fr om step No. 3 below.

.

Newshour

Gl ® @ Wheel of Fortune
@ Bamey Miller
7:05
Sanford and Son
7:30 IJ (1) ® New Newlywed

Livestock

614-992-6485.

4 :00PM. 304-273-5166.

17" x44" .1 " eiiMin gun c•e
hold1 24 arrows. double doors,
four · dr1wers, w•lnut flniah
Homemlde, 304-876· 1229.

12 foot Fiberglas Jon Bo~t

992-7207.

81 ~egetables

'Tony's Gun Rep1irs. hot 18blue-

Used Burnham 200.000 btu g•
furn1ce wtth controls . Manfurd
Bl•sing , 304·676·21 16 .

63

I

7

port
@News
®
MacNeil-Lehrer

•t 00 00 304-882-2787.

1979 Bonneville 4 door AT. AC.
AM -FM . 302 en9lne, good tires.
e:ccellerrt condit10n . Call 114-

Ounrovin FrultvFarm will close
Nov. 26, Get your applet while
they last Ph. 61 4-898· 6298
Hrs 12 00 to 6:00 closed on
Mond-v•- St. Rt. 681 South of
Albany

;ng . Open B.OOAM to 7 :00PM .
Coli 304-175-4631 .
Surplus regu .. r lfmy ClmGu·
fltga. C.rh1rtt, Denim, Rental
dothlng, c1moYftage caverall1
830.00. H. 0. "Sam" Somerville. (Sgt. U.S.A.F. Ret.l e.. t
of Rwenswood. Fri. Sat. Sun.
12:00-8 :00 PM, otherdf/t18fttr

•

7270

35 mm. C1nnon AE1 Program
Camera. Regular tens, zoom lens
end flMh attachmen1 Call 614·

304-882-3110

1976. Cobra partially ras1omd
has AM FM Cassatt. PB. PS,
rebuilt 4-speed, good condition
Ph 614 - 245~ 9152or614~ 446 -

Musical
Instruments

Boats and
Motors for Sale

I

TUHOY

1.

fD liJ M•A•S•H
0 IIl People's Court '·
CIJ Nightly Business Re-

Want to buy pickup load of corn,

1-614-886-7311

Oregonwvnd Cattery Kannel.
CFA H1m1layan. Petsl.n and
Siamese k1t1ens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614-446-3844
after 7PM

Zenith turntable. cauette tepe
dedi , turner amplifier, $300 00
hghted tterlo cabinet • 100 00

76

Mercedes 1978 450SEL4-door
XX Sh•p loaded will tn.de

Wellston. Oflio

Plastic c1stern $tlte approved.
plestic septic t1nks, plastic
culverts. metal cutverts RON •
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jack·
son, Oh. &amp;14-286· 5930

lood 836 . Coll614-448-2223 or
614-446-3028.

676-2039 .

2986 .

I

Mazda Sportslook
fill C!l Jefferson•
CIJ 3-2-1, Contact iCC)
liD Secret City
® Facta of Ufe
I]) Andy Griffith
0 C1J fBI NBC News
(!] Beat of Bill Dance
CIJ D Cil ABC News
fill C!l Hogan's Heroes
CIJ Doctor Who
(jj) Gl @ CBS News
® Body Electric
@ Good Times
I]) Sofa at Home In Stereo
0 C1J PM Magazine
Cil Hardcastle and McCor·
mick
•
(!] SportsCenter Love
I]) Entertainment Tonight
up c om~ng

8275 00 , 1984 Honda ZIO~
motorcycle $27&amp;.00 Call 304-

Now buymg thell corn or ear
corn Call lor latest quotes River
' Clty Ftrm Suppty, 614 . ~41 ·

2

Mark Harmon talks about his
film . "Summer
School, " wh1ch focuses on
his comedic talents.

I

Wanted to Buy

PENN'S WAREHOUSE
, 6 Deys 8 laS

388-84t7. '

THYCAT

I!)

, '85 Chevy 51() truck, 4 wheel
driwe , 4 speed, $7,450.00.

be·

I ll 1 I I I

News

388-9688 .

the

low to form fo ur s1mple wo rds

ill Big Valley

1978 Dodge Power Wagon for
between 8-Sp.m. 614·

0

614-384 -3645
Callahan' s U•ed Tire Shop. Over
1,()00 tlrts , Illes 12. 13, 14, 15,
11 . 166 8m1lesoutRt 218
Call814-266-6251

O four
Rear range letters of
scra mbled wordJ

6:00 DC1JCIJDCIJ@" (J2J@

~ale e~ll

0

Misc . Merchandise

uNd eppll.ac• and TV uts.

OaiUpollt.

7_. - - - - - - 1_24_ 3_4_
bedroom hou• for rent. Ph
,.

SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE 12

Open lAM to IPM. Mon thtu

Rent ols

Elec. Range 36m S95 00, Elec.
Rsnge 40in . S75 00. Elec
Range lOin. avocado 8126 00,
2 elc. ranges 30 In white
t125.00 etch . Elec drver cop·
ptrtone, g11 dryer $96 00.
Kenmore automatiC w11her
895 .00 Skaggt Applisnces,
Upper River Rd. Ph 61 4-446·
7398. So.fadtamp
For selegood used colorTV's c 1111
614-446-1149

Profnaional office 1p1ce tor ' Coal deUvered. R~o~n of Mine,
rent. Bend Area Medical Center, ... 2. a ton; lump, 166 a ton,
131 M•in St.. New Htven, Call Don Hoyd. Forut Acres
P•k. Rutland. 814-742-26()0
304-882-3135.

Sat. 114-441-1111, U7 3rd.
A'"- Oallloollt, 0~ ,

lthchen. bath. • Clf'Pttlng Call

Flowet" couch &amp; love seat, good
conditiOn 266-5128.8

8461 .

Mmhan1lis1:

Mobll ft homes, uoB .ooto
$2715.00 month. Wllter 1nd
nwtr indudtd 114--441-0417,

creu Motel. 814-448-7398

3870.

3 bedroom furnished tnll• on
7 acr es. 2 barns. 1 sept ic .tank
and rurel water for 7,000
6,4· 446-8699.

d ryers, r...
~ r 1gereton,

plus security deposit. Call 614- ' Sofa Beds one like neW
448·8218 1fter 5 :30.
8260.00, colt over S6CO 00
new, onegoodthapet65.00ph
3 rooms furnished upstairs 94 814-446-1769 '
Locust St. 8200 00 month
t&amp;O.OO deposit, utilities paid. Ph 1 Llrge liltd Se•s Fuel Oil
614-44&amp;-1340 or 8t4-44&amp;- Stove. e:ccellent condit1on Ph.

.. 304-773-6024.

Cr1b cr. .k. Road, married couple only, children wlleame, no
p1t1, $100.00 par month, d•
osit requirftl, utillti• e:ctft,

0

oloctrlc. 1200.00 JHir month

Cietn, roomy 2 bedroom aplt't·
menta, Reduced New H1ven.
W.Va. Call 814-992· 7481 Also
commercial lpiiCa.

&amp; 4 W.O .

614-441-0322

Furnished Apt. for rent, 1 or 2
adults only Water and tt11sh
p1ck-up included
Vou PlY

-=:----:-"---lc-

Vans

1982 Subaru 4 WD w.gon, VG
cond, S3,35C . Call , 614-4416 ·
4141 ,
""
I

Used Furniture: W11her &amp;
dr.,..., ga l'lnge. wood tattle &amp;
2 bench•, bed1, dr•eer. wood
wardrobe. 3 miles out
Bulevilla Rd. Open 9AM to
IIPM, Mon. thru Sal.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

PUULI~

EVENING

73

WOlD
GAM I

TIIAT OAILT

11/20/86

1729.

U95. O.k 1100 up to 8375
Hutch11 1400 and up. Bunk
bedt comphrte w -mMtru•
1295 and up to 1311. a.trt bed&amp;
11106 S176. Mett'"MIOt'boll.
tprlngt full or tWin 113. firm
$73, ..,d t83 Oue~tetl$226.
King t3&amp;0. 4 dr1wer ch•t t85
Drn•rs 189 . Gun c.binfll:• 8,
10, &amp; 12 gun. G11 or ~ ectric
rtnge t376 Baby r'f'ettres•s
$311 &amp; *45 ·Bed fram• 120.
UO &amp; King frame SIO Good
seiiCtion of bedroom suites,
metal clbmets, hndboards UO
and up to U6

614-246-6818 .

304-675-1206

Rr.al

Two 1973 White freithl lin••·
both good cond. 304·458·

Wood t.ble w·&amp; chlirt U815 to

------'-- ---,- -, w11 hen.

LMgololl . Co11114-992-7479.

Unfurnished 2 bedfoom In sy,..
cuse. Wuher hoolt up, cable
T.V $160. per month plus
utilit181 1nd deposit. Call 114·

34

'

2 bdr. newly radecorated. ell
utllhiet paid, neer McOonalda.

1l ·ltJ

212 a;dwoll. OH 46614 oo coli
Mary0"8rionot614-446-7150

recreational th•apy are desired
but considerations will be given
to motNated 1pplicanu e:c perl•cad in recreational activit 1ts
who pas•11 drNe , 1nowtion
1nd a compauton for caring and
und..-mnding of the efderly
Appht1tion1 are available at The
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Monday through Friday

676-5123.

Sof• end chlirs prieR ffom
1395 to 1996. T•bl• t&amp;O and
up to 1125. Hld•e·btdl 1390

Furnished apt, 1 bdr. 1225 to 1681. Recliners 1226 to
utilitiel ptid. 701 4th Gsllipolis. · U75. Lamps Ul tO t1215
c.u·441-4,418 •tt~r e pm.
Dlntetei 1101end up to 14915

~erv11:es

11

1950 Ford pickup Flatheitd six,
good cond, S1 ,200 Otl. 304·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

t22ft. Utlliti•

15

The Daily

!hursday. November 20, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

QXXH

GB

FX
GWF

F X

XE

FX

i\

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David Letterman Tan 1ght 's

guests are Bolly Crystal aM
John Lithgow . (60 min I In
Stereo.
CD Best of Groucho
(]) ABC Newa Nlghtline
G (I) More Roa• People
(jj) Columbo
~ MOVIE: 'Get Carter'

.

.

-··

U X G Pil ,

Q

X X li

P B NN

UH

FVXWGPB - CIVZ
FEIS U
Yetterd8)''8 Cryptoquote: NEVER BE AFRAIO. THE
ENEMY WHO FORCES YOU TO RETREAT IS HIMSELF
AFRAIO OF YOU AT THA'f VERY MOMENT. - M.
GABRIEL HANOTAUX
12:30 IJ CII @ Late Night with

'•

X FI\B VN

FBIYI\

U XGPBV

•

·s N

'

.. '

12:40 Gl ® MOVIE: 'Bimini . :
Code'
1 ·OQ ill Jack Benny
® Jimmy Breslin's People :'.:
(60 min)
till liJ Wild, Wild West
1:06 CD MOVIE: 'Moby Dick'
1:30 D CD Today' a Buoineu
Cil Doble Gillis
(!) Down tho Stretch (R).

'

(

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